The Jordan Harbinger Show - 1243: Christopher Whitcomb | A Life Among Spies Part Two
Episode Date: November 20, 2025Ex-FBI sniper Christopher Whitcomb survived warlords, black ops, and helicopter crashes. He's here to explain how calculating risk kept him alive. [Pt. 2/2]Full show notes and resources can b...e found here: jordanharbinger.com/1243What We Discuss with Christopher Whitcomb:Guantanamo Bay exposed the systematic breakdown between official policy and reality. Christopher Whitcomb witnessed 13-year-olds detained 12,000 miles from home while interrogators chanted "Fair, firm and impartial" over prisoners' screams. The same general later oversaw Abu Ghraib's abuses.East Timor combined apocalyptic violence with staggering natural wealth. Indonesia massacred up to 300,000 people during the island's secession, yet oil bubbled from the ground and natural gas ignited hillsides, creating a Wild West economy that attracted contractors seeking manageable chaos.Intelligence work often pays in ways that complicate normal life. Christopher earned contracting money through intelligence agencies that was "hard to spend sometimes," revealing the strange economics of covert operations.Elite operators face profound psychological costs. Christopher's friend warned him to "stop trying to get 14-year-old guys to kill you because you have some death fantasy," highlighting how repeated high-stakes missions create patterns of self-destructive behavior that operators must eventually confront.Recognition of dysfunction is the first step toward meaningful change. By acknowledging his own "insanity" and identity crisis, Christopher demonstrates that even those in extreme professions can develop self-awareness and begin questioning the systems they served. If you haven't already, make sure to hear part one of this two-part episode here!And much more...Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!And if you're still game to support us, please leave a review here — even one sentence helps! Sign 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!This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: BiOptimizers Magnesium Breakthrough: 15% off: magbreakthrough.com/jordan, code JORDANSignos: $10 off select programs: signos.com, code JORDANQuince: Free shipping & 365-day returns: quince.com/jordanTonal: $200 off: tonal.com, code JORDANProgressive Insurance: Free online quote: progressive.comSee 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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This episode is sponsored in part by Conspiruality Podcast.
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Today, part two with Chris Whitcomb.
If you haven't heard part one yet, definitely go back and check it out.
Former FBI hostage rescue team sniper who has been shot at, hunted, stranded in war zones,
a lot of crazy tales here on the show.
Great conversation so far.
So let's keep it going.
Here's part two with Chris Whitcomb.
Tell me about East Timor, because you start this security company, not contractor.
Yeah, it's not a contract.
You start the security company, but it sounds kind of like the Wild West meets
mafia extortion racket meets like typical Africa, except it's not in Africa, kind of stuff.
This place sounds like it's the Somalia of South Asia.
I mean, it's just like it's true.
It's true.
It really sounds like that.
So in 2006, I came back from Somalia and had this buddy at a bookstore on Abakini and Venice.
Great place.
It's a crazy clubhouse.
Really fun.
And he said, you got to stop being a pussy.
I said, what do you mean?
He said, you got to stop trying to get 14-year-old guys to kill you because you have some death fantasy because you're like Hemingway, right?
And I said, well, you got a good point there.
So I said, I need a war I can, that I could manage.
So as it turned out, I had two things.
One, I had some money that I had made contracting through intelligence agencies was,
oddly enough, hard you spend sometimes because of the nature of how those things pay out.
Okay.
And then I had a friend who was an entrepreneur who was a member of another intelligence agency in another country.
And we had a conversation in New York, and he had an idea and it involved this country called East Timor.
East Timor is half of an island that's north of Darwin, Australia, and east of Bali.
What's the other half of the island, Sri Lanka is on?
West Timor.
West Timor.
Oh, really?
I've never heard of West Timor.
I mean, it's just little.
tiny island. So they divided it in half and they seceded from Indonesia. It was part of Indonesia.
Okay. When East Timor said, we're out, Indonesia came in and they killed a third of the population.
Oh. Massacred, men, women, and children. And I don't know the number you'll have to Google it.
But I think it's between two and three hundred thousand people. Yeah. It's a staggering number of people.
So West Timor is part of Indonesia then. It still is. Okay. So as a matter of, yes, that's another story.
So I said, all right, what's going on in East Timor? They have, it's one of the most remarkable.
places on earth because they have massive gas reserves, oil and natural gas, including literally
pools of oil that look like ponds, but they're just oil bubbling out of the ground.
Sounds like some dinosaur shit.
It's like the Librae Tarpies, but it's real, but it's like still active, right?
Except you can put it in your lawnmower.
Yeah, that's crazy.
And they have natural gas, which is wild, but it comes out of the ground, and it will light
on fire, and you'll see these hillsides that look like a giant barbecue grill.
That's really cool, though.
It's so cool.
As long as it doesn't kill anyone.
And I always said it's five of the most beautiful places I've ever been in my life
because they have red coral beaches.
I mean, red coral.
Red sand, yeah?
No, red coral that takes over that.
But they have black sand.
Oh, wow.
That's really cool.
And they had Jumanji jungle.
I mean, just the most beautiful primeval jungle with everything that you would find in those jungles.
What is it with any place that's that beautiful is always a complete shit dangerous?
Right, because they're going to hack you up with a machete.
Right.
Like they can't just sit and enjoy the sand and the coral and the natural resources.
is they got to kill everybody.
Right.
And listen, I don't want to say anything bad about the Timorese
because I have great, great, great respect
for the leaders of the country and the Timorese.
I had a wonderful time there within the parameters of my insanity.
But getting killed with a gun is one thing.
Getting killed with a rock or stone to death
or getting cut up with a machete.
Yeah.
It's not much more pleasant.
Exactly right.
So anyway, so I said, all right, what are we going to do?
And they had this plan that was closely aligned with the fact
that it was strategically important to major Five Eyes countries.
including the United States.
Here's a question
that probably
just above both
of our pay grades
potentially,
but when that country
secedes,
Indonesia's like,
you're not leaving.
Why?
Because of the resources
or because it sets a bad
precedent to let
everybody who wants to leave
leave your country?
I think so.
I mean,
there are,
I don't know how many
UN studies
and, I mean,
this is very,
very broadly written
about documentaries.
When I went from Somalia,
which was stood up
as a country
and fell down
a very short period
time afterwards,
I went to Timor,
which at the time
was the newest country
in the world.
I remember reading about
it was great fanfare
that this is the newest country and backpackers were like, I'm going to go check it out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And after hearing your stories, I'm like, did any of those backpackers ever come back?
I knew a lot of those backpackers.
Okay.
I mean, technically, I was one of those backpackers.
I mean, I flew to Timor with a suitcase and a one-way ticket.
You maybe knew a little bit more about what you were getting into than the people from
lonely planet?
Fair enough.
Yeah.
Yeah, I did know a little bit more, and I did have a little bit more of a mechanism.
Yeah.
But it is a stunningly beautiful place when the Indonesians killed a third of the
population. They also raised the country. They took the phone lines. They blew up the roads. They
burned the buildings. They killed anybody who wasn't either on their side or was too old or too young
to care about. So it was decimated. So into that vacuum came the United Nations. They stood up
what they call a mission. So it would be the United Nations mission in Timor, unmet. And they
restored some kind of livability and got the country back on its feet a little bit. When they pulled out,
all of a sudden you had a civil war.
Sure.
Because everybody wants whatever shit's left over, right?
So the military, getting a big gunfight with the police, and it went downhill from there.
So I went in during the Civil War, not during the secession from Indonesia.
Gotcha.
And but when I went in, there were tanks in the streets.
The Australians were there.
They had an international defense force, which was Portuguese.
And it started out as a Portuguese colony.
Oh, that was, yeah.
Okay, that makes sense.
Plus all the guys you see in the blue helmets from the United Nations, they were in there.
So anywhere you go.
there were tanks and helicopters
and guys with machine guns
walking up and down the dirt roads
that was supposed to be streets.
It was wild, absolutely wild.
And there was no government per se, really.
Why did I get confused and think it was Sri Lanka?
Is there another, did Sri Lanka have a...
You might be talking about Myanmar.
Myanmar was a big backpacker place until that went down.
No, I was thinking about it.
For some reason, I had it pegged as Sri Lanka
because with the Tamil Tigers, the terrorist group was...
I think they're partially there, but...
But that was another island.
I just got the name.
I don't know.
I got confused because you're right.
It's in Indonesia, so it's in Asia.
I didn't clock that.
Indonesia is a fascinating country because it's so big.
It's the largest Muslim population in the world.
Isn't it like a thousand different islands, something like that?
I think it's like 3,600.
Oh, so it's more than it's thousands.
Thousands.
And thousands of dialects.
So Timor, for example, spoke Tetan, the local language, the local dialect.
They spoke Indonesian because it was an Indonesian country.
It was part of Indonesia.
They spoke English because that's what the United Nations requires.
And they spoke all the languages, if,
a United Nations country came in, and they wanted to work in the house they would learn that.
So anytime you find these colonized, impoverished, marginalized countries around the world, whatever
terminology, third world, a developing nation, whatever, whatever terminology.
And you actually live it.
I mean, I was there off and on for seven years.
And when you see how those things actually work, it's pretty disillusioning about the world
and charity.
Anyway, that's another story.
But I ended up there.
I started this company, and I brought in a couple expats.
I hired the Prime Minister's son, who was a remarkable guy in his own right.
It was the third company that I'd started.
So entrepreneurially, I looked at this entrepreneurial, not like I just wanted to start an army on my own in the jungle.
That's what it turned out to be, but that's not where I started.
But anyway, they had no currency, so they used U.S. dollars.
But the U.S. dollars came from China, pallet loaded on cargo planes.
Okay.
And my buddy, the backup guitar player, and my band was the president of A&Z Bank.
and he would have three to seven million dollars at any given time, like in the telecounter,
because there was no credit, there was no checks, no credit cards.
Right.
Everything was cash.
Are they real dollars?
Real dollars.
Okay.
But they came from China.
Why?
So you could just wipe the ink off with your thumb.
It was all counterfeit.
Yeah.
That's what I mean.
So they weren't real dollars.
No, they weren't real dollars.
But they operated.
I mean, this was monopoly money in a country that had nothing.
What was it like Poland in the, during the Cold War, they would use like Kent cigarettes?
Yeah.
And so you'd be passing this pack of cigarettes that was, you know, unsmokably destroyed.
But it was like, now it's still a pack.
It still counts because it was just currency.
It didn't matter what it looked like.
Well, people talk about money and cash.
We don't use cash anymore.
You go to Starbucks.
They look at you're nuts if you try to give them a $5.
There are places around where I live up in NorCal and it says cash free.
If you show up with cash, you're washing dishes.
You have luck.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
When I built that company, I built that company with no safety net at all.
And as it grew bigger and bigger, you needed a safety net because if you don't make,
If billing doesn't match up with receipts at the end of the month, you got all the guys that you hire as henchmen to burn everybody else down.
They're coming after you.
So they'd line up 4,000 people all over the country and they'd show up to get paid in cash.
And we'd go to the bank and get $2.5 million in 20s on a Friday morning.
And then you line up and we'd have our own guys like the inner guys who would be ready to go after the other guys.
Anything could happen.
Yeah, because it seems like an invitation to get robbed.
But then again, you are robbing the security company for the whole country, so maybe no one's going to steal.
Yeah, but they are at war, too.
So, I mean, it was not easy starting that company.
But somehow it worked.
You know, really extraordinary people.
Yeah.
And the T. Maurice, by and large, are remarkable people in their own way, just the culture of the island itself.
Now, remember, they started out as a Portuguese colony in the 16th century.
I didn't know that.
Okay.
So they were Catholic, but they were also animist.
So they would go to church on Sundays in these big cathedrals that had been built in the 1800s.
And then they would go out, or I would go out with them.
And we'd go to these cemeteries that were all totems.
You got like water buffalo skulls and we'd have cast spells.
That's cool.
It was wild because for somehow, I don't know how, somehow they, being the people in the company and the people that I interacted with, thought that I had black magic that was stronger than everybody else.
They thought you had black magic?
Me personally.
What gave them that idea?
I have no idea.
Just you're like a tall white guy
so they're like, he must be magical.
I don't know what happened,
but I can tell you that that's why I survived
and that's why I thrived there.
Really?
I don't know why, but I can tell you
endless stories about what that means,
chicken sacrifices and, you know,
all the different stuff, exercising.
There was the ghost in a well that story
that I wrote about.
So they would call you and be like,
hey, man, I got evil spirits.
Well, I had this guy named Johnny.
Johnny is like J-A-U-G-H-N-N-Y-E.
Like it was phonetic of,
whatever his tattoo name was, right?
But Johnny was a stunt.
Johnny was the greatest.
He was one of the senior local executives in the company.
But he came up one day and he said, boss, I need Thursday off.
And I said, okay, cool.
What's going on?
Yeah.
And he said, my aunt died.
And I go, Johnny, didn't your sister die yesterday and somebody else died the day before?
What's going on with your family?
Yeah.
And he said, well, you know, I've got a really good job.
My uncle's really jealous.
So he's cast all these spells on my family to kill them.
And he goes, I really need your help.
and he wanted me to come over on his day off to put together some spells that were stronger than his uncles.
So you don't anticipate those types of tasking requests as CEO of a company.
No.
But that's Tuesday.
But it's also better than him telling you to come over so you can go kill his uncle, right?
No, there's plenty of that too.
There's plenty of that too.
There's plenty of that.
That's kind of where I saw the story going.
Yeah.
And then it just made a hard right into.
No, you never know what you're getting.
I mean, violence that you're exposed to day to day.
is awful.
It sounds like a life is cheap kind of country.
Is that accurate?
You know,
that's a really great question.
I don't know that because the people that,
the team race that I knew and worked with,
and I had enormous respect for,
they were beautiful in a lot of ways,
but something would snap.
Like I had this guy one time.
He was a guard outside of,
there's not a supermarket,
but it was like a place where you'd buy
expired canned goods from China.
Okay.
That's how you'd survive.
Yeah.
And bald eagle.
That was a delicacy too.
Actual bald eagle?
Yeah, but that's another story.
It's really bad.
You should start a podcast that's called
that's another story.
Yes, another story.
And if you're playing the drinking game at home where you drink every time he says that's another story, I'm not paying for your hospital bills.
I mean, we only have so much time.
That's right.
We've probably already running out of this time.
We got another hour, man.
All right.
Well, just we'll play a game where you go.
Tell me one of those other stories.
This story is important because when the Indonesian started the war and when it went from there, most of the weapons were taken out of the general population.
So you'd have some in the army, some in the police.
Most of them were taken out of society.
So you would have bows and arrow.
poison darts,
machetes,
which were most
often handmade.
It's like being in prison,
right?
Everything was manufactured.
I'd rather get shot,
I think.
Yeah.
If I had to choose
between poison,
bow, and arrow and shot,
and choose and shot every time.
I think you're a smart guy to it.
You get a lot going on.
But anyway,
so this guy's guarding a supermarket.
Let me back up.
You needed a private security company
to guard whatever you had as a westerner.
If you wanted to go and live there and work there,
you had to hire my company or my competitor
because if not they would burn you out,
take your women and kill your whatever else.
It was that bad.
Just civil war situation where everybody's died.
Well, the civil war didn't last that long.
It wasn't really the civil war.
It was that when you take that much from a culture,
it creates a vacuum.
In that vacuum, you pour in human nature.
And human nature says, I want what's left.
You have a complete lack of order in ways that we take it for granted.
So people are going to say, well, maybe I could take his refrigerator.
I'm going to go find out.
and you go take his refrigerator, you know, it goes downhill fast from there.
So there was a lot of that.
It wasn't necessarily the Civil War.
It was everything that came around.
They had this guerrilla leader named Renato who was going to come in and take over the government.
Actually tried.
We had a coup d'etat.
Oh, really?
Yeah, he came down with his rebels out of the mountains.
I mean, literally, like, came down out of the jungles,
attacked the president's house and attacked the prime minister's house.
They shot the president, Ramos Horta, who won, he was a Nobel Prize winner.
They shot him, I think, seven times, and he survived.
He survived.
No, the guy's a stud.
That's unbelievable.
That's unbelievable.
That's why you choose getting shot instead of a machete.
Okay.
You're going to survive the machete.
That's right.
Because now we're going to talk about the machete.
That's right.
So somebody calls up and says, hey, Jimmy Joe just chopped off somebody's head at the supermarket,
which is, you know, it's like a cave with some dead stuff out front that you could buy to eat.
So we go over there and I go over and there's this guy sitting on a bucket turned over.
And I go up to him and there's a guy with his head chopped off.
And I go, dude, what's going on?
You know, you're supposed to protect him.
Why'd you chop his head off?
And he just looks up at me and he looks back down to his feet.
So things would happen that you would try to intellectualize.
There's no intellectualizing some behaviors.
Yeah.
It's just he didn't know why I did it.
Just chopped the guy's head off.
Jeez.
Anyways, you learn a lot about human nature traveling in different cultures
and I've been in a lot of different cultures.
It would be exhausting to live that way.
It was exhausting.
Yeah.
Like when you leave, you don't miss it, I assume.
I mean, maybe some...
I always missed it.
You missed it?
Bad.
What do you miss?
I feel like the hypervigigigil
would get old facts. Because every day, every moment of every day was every single possible thing
you could expect out of life. It was so intense. It was like a 24-hour, seven-year gunfight.
Sometimes it was, you know, those things. But I think that some people get to a point,
and you probably find this with professional athletes. You've interviewed everybody,
remarkable people, extraordinary people. And I think many of those people probably told you,
you're the perfect example. You're not there yet, but you're going to be there someday.
When you look back and you're going to miss the Vig, you're going to look back and you're going to miss the action, whatever it is.
So many professional athletes hang on as long as they can because when it's over, it's over.
Get used to it.
And you accept that you've moved on to something else in life.
That sucks.
My life has been a scale down of those things going from combat to whatever to business, because business can get that too.
When you're going to make a payroll every month.
In fake dollars.
Yeah, in fake dollars.
But it doesn't matter what it is.
When you live a life intensely and you realize it's starting to become less intense, many people don't like that.
I didn't like it.
I could see that.
I mean, it could just be my midlife crisis talking, but I feel like I could taste a little bit of that.
By the way, where do you buy millions of dollars in counterfeit U.S. money from China asking for a friend?
What people don't realize, in my opinion, like I've worked with many of the primary intelligence agencies, the five eyes, you know, the five eyes are the ally intelligence agencies.
agencies. U.S., UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand. Yes, exactly right.
Am I the same work? No. No, that's it. But then you have Mossad, or let me say you have the Israelis,
you have Mossad should bet all those organizations. But then we have favored nation status with some
countries and work well with them, like the French and the Italians sometimes. But I was working
like with Mozambique and South Africa. Sure. I've spent a great deal of time in Africa. And some of these
organizations have a whole different set of rules. And your interaction with them creates a lot of
problems for the five-eyes countries that you're working with. It becomes very, very complex.
What sort of rules conflict with the...
Like you'd go to jail for talking improperly to a foreign intelligence agency.
Here's the thing that I learned about the Chinese that I think people need to know. When I went to
Timor, I was the largest employer in the country, and I was an American. And I went to the United
States Embassy in Timor in seven years. I went there one time. It was Fourth of July.
And it was a pool party, and I talked to nobody.
The USAID, it was disbanded basically by Trump.
So many people wouldn't have known about USAID unless that had happened.
But USAID is very big in certain countries, and they were very big in Timor.
But here's the difference.
And here's where we're going to this story.
The Chinese came in, and their model would be the Chinese would come in and they would go to the government.
And they would say, we're going to give you, literally did.
This is not hypothetical.
They brought in 12 BMW SUVs on a boat.
They gave them to the 12 ministers in charge of the departments that they wanted to influence.
Then they say, we're going to build you a new government building that's going to cost $2.5 million.
They brought in the concrete.
They brought in the architects.
They brought in the laborers.
They brought in all the materials and all the money went back.
On paper, they gave Timor $2.5 million.
Yeah.
2.45 went back to China.
Sure.
But they leave the laborers behind.
You go anywhere in Central America, South America, Africa, many developing nations, you're going to see the same.
model. So they have been brilliant in colonizing the world with a business model where they bring
in foreign aid, but they leave people behind to integrate within the culture. The Chinese
have been doing that for thousands of years. Yeah, and it's genius. It's brilliant. So the Chinese
came in and did this and a buddy of mine ran Manitoba hydroelectric. They literally Timor was powered by a
bunch of gas diesel generators in ConEx boxes. You'd never had power. I mean, living there was really
rough. Yeah, I bet. But the government finally had enough money held in what they called a Stockholm
trust because they weren't allowed to spend the money. The UN would appropriate a portion money.
So the government came out and went to tender with a new power grid system for the entire country.
And I don't remember, so I'm going to get it wrong. But I know it was more than a billion dollars.
It might have been one five, one six. I know this because my buddy ran the power company or ran the
power grid, right? The government opened the contract at 11 o'clock at night, another exaggeration.
duration. They opened it for a very, very brief time period, like midnight to eight in the morning.
They had one bid, and it was the Chinese company that had put the whole thing together.
They got the contract, and they did very, very poorly on the job, but all the money went back.
So the Chinese come in with $2.5 million for government building and 12 BMW SUVs, and they leave
with a billion dollars. And they leave their people behind to integrate with the culture, and you now
have an infrastructure that gives you any information that you want. And that's what they've done
around the world, including the United States of America. That's their model. The United States
model at the time, this is not an exaggeration. This is specifically, the United States came in
with $12,500 to buy t-shirts that said, support Timor buy local. There were these ugly brown
t-shirts with gold lettering. And that was the contribution the United States government made
to one of the potentially primary important sites near the nuclear highway and with this oil and natural gas.
And you take those two models together and you realize how we've been asleep at the wheel for quite some time.
Yeah. It's over. I mean, that's a very small metaphor that I would use to explain where we are in the world right now.
Yeah. Russia doesn't do that. Iran doesn't do that. North Korea doesn't do that. China has done it. And I've seen these things.
living in those environments.
Yeah.
How they work on a day-to-day basis.
So he's sitting there doing the math like 12 guys, two of us, no guns, four hours to the safe house.
That is a word problem they don't give you on the SATs.
Speaking of math, let's run the numbers on keeping the show going.
Here's a quick word from the people who make it possible.
We'll be right back.
Don't forget about our free course, six-minute networking.
It is something that I teach to three-letter agencies and private organizations,
just like the one that Chris Whitcomb used to be a part of.
And I would love to share the, well, the safe for work stuff with you all.
and do it for free. No shenanigans. Six-Minutnetworking.com is about inspiring other people to create a relationship with you, doing it in a systematic way that really only takes a few minutes a day and many of the guests on the show.
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I was in Laos, about this time last year, and not in the touristy areas generally, just kind of driving around.
front around in the country, hiking, stuff like that.
And you see this big dam and you're like, wow, that's out of place and looks really new.
And there's Chinese writing on it.
It's a really nice highway.
This looks pretty new.
Yeah, yeah.
It's brand new.
It's built by the Chinese.
All right, we're going to take the train.
And I'm like, oh, nice.
What's a Laoshen train going to look like?
Am I right?
Guys, let's hope the thing stays on the tracks.
And you go and it's a brand new station.
There's a Chinese police officer in the corner.
All the writing is in Chinese.
There's a video playing in Chinese.
They're selling Chinese snacks at the train station.
And a bullet train arrives.
I'm like, what country am I in?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because I thought I was a lot.
I just got out of the jungle swatting away bugs that probably have some kind of venom that rots your skin away.
And I'm getting on a bullet train with air conditioning where even the writing and all the parts are in Chinese and the bathroom signs are in Chinese.
They didn't even bother making it readable to the local population.
They were just like, nah.
All the Chinese nationals watching this podcast right now, you're the best.
Yeah.
I mean, I speak Mandarin.
And a part of it is because, look, they're so smart.
I need to be able to talk to the rest of the world.
They're smart.
They're committed.
I'm not saying that it's good.
Don't get me wrong.
I'm not saying it's right.
But I'm saying the gig is over.
I don't even know how we could try to catch up at this point.
It's like an insurmountable task.
That's true.
Yeah.
Listen, I'm a patriot.
Well, yeah.
Live and died from my country.
You are.
Right?
Haven't died.
I make these statements out of the reality of the life that I've lived in those worlds.
I'm not saying I want it to be the case.
I'm not saying I have an answer of how it happened or where we go from here.
I'm just saying people need to realize,
when you're watching all these stories about what's happening in the world right now,
you may be looking in a wrong direction.
The Chinese are really committed.
The only way that I can see us getting ahead is either AI or quantum supremacy that allows us to just have a crazy edge,
which is they're investing in that as much or more than we are.
There's some economic bubble or something that bursts in China that just sets them back 20 years
and gives us a chance to seize that advantage instead of just going,
oh, look at that guy, tripped over his own shoes and then continuing to pick our nose
and, you know, watch television, which is, anyway, like you said, another conversation.
Can we talk about Waco and Ruby Ridge and the FBI?
I'll talk about it only because you're a great guy and because people are going to ask, right?
People are going to ask, yeah.
But I'll say it this, there's no way to sugarcoat this.
Waco, people know what Waco is.
Some people know what Ruby Ridge is.
I don't know if people know what Waco.
I mean, we're old.
You've got to realize.
Well, only because, well, it's become a folk thing.
It's become like the Kennedy assassination.
And because.
That's true.
of my name Tiller Russell was a brilliant movie director, did a big Netflix show called Waco, American
Apocalypse. It popularized it. If it wasn't popularized enough, he brought four people in to talk
about it. An FBI hostage rescue team sniper, which is me, a negotiator who tried to talk the thing out,
which is a guy named Gary Nesner. Oh, yeah. And the guy that ran it and then a branched David
and he talked to Dick DeGaron a little bit, who was an attorney that came in for David Crush.
Bottom line, there was a shootout with the ATF. A lot of people died, both sides. The government
didn't really have anything, any backstop to take over once the firefight ended and it was war.
And that was us.
We were the final backstop, the Hush Rescue team.
We flew in 51 days later, the building burned down and 80-something people died.
Now, this is 30 years ago.
I remember watching it on TV.
Many people that would watch don't even know what we're talking about.
However, it's become a very, very big controversy because people have very strong things to say about the government, about the FBI, about how these things
happen, I was involved in it. So people ask, it was not an issue in my life for 30 years because I've
lived such a broad life. It was a very, very small event. It was a tragic event where 80-something people died.
I'm not belittling the impact, but I'm saying, imagine what happened to your life, not 30 years
ago, but like two-thirds of your life. Got my learned is permanent. Two-thirds of life ago, something
happens. Yeah. And it did. So people always ask me about it. I respect that. And I'll answer specific
questions that you have about it. I think most people forgot what it was. And I'm going off memory here,
but wasn't it? So David Koresh started a cult. They built a compound in Waco, Texas. And then
they decided we're going to buy a bunch of guns. Yes. And stockpile weapons and ammunition.
ATF got wind of it and said, you probably don't need this unless you're going to be up to something.
And then I assume there's licenses required for the amount of weapons and ammo they had. They were
kind of preparing for an apocalyptic situation, right? Yeah, but just really quickly,
you hit all the major points. A guy named Vernon Howell changed his name to David Koresh,
because it was prophetic and he became the second coming of Christ.
This isn't me.
This is widely written about.
He said it in his own words.
You can watch it on YouTube a thousand times, right?
When he did that, he built this compound.
People came to stay there to worship with him.
He took all their stuff, took their women,
none of which anybody really cares about.
It's people do in America.
However, what happened was there's no license to buy a bunch of guns or to buy a bunch
of ammo.
But if you put fully automatic trigger seers converting a regular gun,
to fully automatic, you do need a license for that.
He didn't have those.
And he was buying hand grenade husks.
He was putting the components back together to build hand grenades.
So at the time, there's always some kind of terrorism.
There's always some topic du jour that people are worried about.
At the time, it was a Christian national white supremacy domestic terrorism thing
wrapped around this thing called the Turner Diaries, which was the government's coming to get you.
and Zog was the Zionist occupational government.
It was a big thing at that time.
And agencies looking for something to do
sought out people.
It was like a crime with a sceneway to happen.
Okay.
And so ATF went in with a search warrant
to look for those guns and to look for those grenades.
The people in the compound led by David Koresh said no,
and they had a halacious gunfight.
So that's what it was.
I'm not saying it was right or wrong.
I'm not saying they couldn't have picked them up in town.
All of these things are widely debated.
People are going to yell at me.
me and say whatever, call me all these names.
But the reality is, this went on for 51 days.
At the 51st day, Janet Reno, the Attorney General of the United States said,
is enough is enough.
We inserted tear gas into the building with tanks because they were shooting the shit out of us.
I remember watching a video of this tank without a cannon.
It had like a, I don't know, a wall pusher in or whatever you call.
It had a boom.
It had a boom.
It looked bad.
Yeah.
But it was like square.
And boom, it knocks a wall in.
And it shoots tear gas.
And we were shooting tear gas in it.
But they were hos in us, man.
I mean, they shot the branched of idioms inside that compound, shot so many bullets, so many rounds.
They had to weigh them.
They picked him up with a front end loader, and they had to weigh them.
He had millions of rounds of ammo, and they shot a lot of them at us.
So there's not a lot to say, except that I now have come to terms with the fact that it's an American story.
Yeah.
A bad one.
Yeah.
It's a very bad one.
Do you feel like you carry moral weight when this mission, like a mission like that becomes so,
tragic and shitty.
Why?
Not like it's your fault, but I just mean like you were like, oh man, maybe I wish I wasn't
part of that or anything along those lines.
Nobody wants to be part of something like that.
I mean, you know, you join the military and you storm the beaches of wherever and you
save the world for democracy.
That's what you want.
Yeah, yeah.
You ask military law enforcement people writ large over the last 200 years.
You ask them how many actually got that?
Not many.
Right.
You sign up waving the flag saying, send me.
You get a politician involved.
it doesn't go well.
We just came off the longest two wars
in American history,
Iraq and Afghanistan,
and you look at the countless heroes,
heroes that said,
I'll go after 9-11,
and you look at what came back.
War is always bad.
In my experience,
and I've been in a shitload of it,
it's always bad.
I wonder what sort of psychological toll
that stuff takes on you emotionally,
even like spiritually.
I know you think about that
more now than you used to.
I went down hard, man.
I think I've done well in my life now.
I'm happy and,
I have a good life. That was not the case for a long time. You were drinking a lot. I mean,
the book mentions alcohol several times. People who drink moderately don't have that many alcohol
references in one publication. Well, that's probably true, but I think many people that live life
experiences wouldn't write as intimate as I did. You read that thing. Yeah. How many people
have you ever known that said, I did this and I did that? That book didn't do me any good in terms of
being a paradigm of virtue in the world, right? No. But the reason I wrote that book was
because I feel that the people that do take my path and there aren't many and that have the
ability to write it down need to do that because somebody's got to tell that story. Not everybody
wants to admit that story exists. They can take aim at me for a lot of different things,
but it's the truth about that world in a way that I felt that I could write down that would
make sense to people, good, bad or otherwise. I should have a little bit of context, but I wanted
to be a writer. I came to California. I wrote for Orange Coast magazine trying to
be a rock star of Dun Orange County. Didn't go well. I went back and was an English teacher at a
boarding school. Then I went and worked for a newspaper. Then I got hired to be a speechwriter in D.C.
Then I ended up in the FBI. So there's the media side, the government side. Then on 9-11,
my first book came out September 12, 2001. So I'd already resigned from the FBI to go into writing.
I said, well, I've done all I can in the FBI. I'm going to go after this now. NBC hired me.
So I went to work for NBC.
So I was on air.
I was that talking head talking about all this stuff.
So I was on the Today Show and Nightly News.
My first book signing was September 12th, 2001 at a borders in the South Tower of the World Trade Center.
So September 11th.
Wow.
I was supposed to go to New York for a book signing on the next morning.
And I was in my FBI office when the towers went down.
And I'd already been scheduled because it was a big press tour.
My first show was Larry King live.
Do you remember Larry King?
Sure.
Yeah.
I used to have Larry.
Really?
Yeah.
Is that right?
Yeah.
That was the first show I ever did.
And then it went from Larry to all the other shows in NBC and ended up getting a show on NBC with Martha McCallum and went to Fox, a daily show.
Yeah.
And so I worked in TV for five years.
GQ excerpted my first book.
And I had the inside cover of GQ magazine, which was wide ridicule, hatred from guys I worked with.
Too fluffy.
It was absurd.
It was so bad.
Yeah.
It was so stupid.
It was so idiotic.
But they excerpted the book and they put me on the mastead.
So I wrote for them.
And then the New York Times hired me to write op-heads.
So I was writing for the New York Times GQ and I was on NBC.
But I went out to Langley and set up a thing where I could work using those covers for elements within the intelligence committee.
That's how it got into the intelligence side of things.
So basically you were a journalist and then you were like, hey, I could use this to be a spy and a journalist.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
I didn't necessarily do spy stuff.
I worked with spies, but I had specific skills that worked in those environments in support of spies, if that makes sense.
It does. There was one part in the book you said you were selling technology to intelligence organizations or something like that.
Yeah, that's another element of it. That was much, much later because when I grew up, I grew up with this guy named Harold Janine, was one of the world's first multinationalists.
And he, this is also widely written about because I know you get the bullshit factor like, shut this guy up, he's just bullshit.
But it's all documented. When Random House bought this book that made me prove everything.
everything.
Photographs.
I'm surprised that publisher gave a shit, honestly.
Because I read stuff and I go, there's no way any of this is true.
And the publisher's like, that's what they said.
We don't really care.
Yeah.
Now, they said they cared.
They cared.
They wanted to see the plane ticket from Somalia.
They wanted contracts to United Nations.
Which publisher?
Random else.
Props to them for giving a shit.
I swear, a lot of the books I read, I go, I'll call Penguin and go, guys,
yeah, yeah, come on.
Yeah, yeah.
Ask anybody who's ever worked in this industry.
And they will, I got, let me introduce you to somebody who will tell you that this isn't
even possible.
I got to give a shout out to the legal department.
apartment at Random House because I've done two books with them. I did this book. I've got another
one, a true crime book that's coming out shortly, both with them, and they're the best. I mean,
I think the world of those guys. They're remarkable. My previous publisher was Time Warner. They
were fantastic, and now I'm at Harper Collins. They're good. But anyway, they verified absolutely
everything. But going back to the intelligent side of things, my uncle Harold was he started
ITT, which is now community colleges or something like that, but in the day was the world's first
multinational corporation. He was a Time magazine man of the year. He's the highest paid executive
for a decade. He was a remarkable guy. But he was a private money financier for the CIA.
He would use his money or the company's money to finance CIA operations, one of which was in
Chile. He paid cash money to overthrow the government of Salvador Ande in Chile in 1970 or 71,
something like that. What's in it for him to use his own money to do that? Because ITT was
international telephone and telegraph.
They used copper for the wires.
Copper was produced. A lot of copper was produced in Chile.
They had a general strike.
Chile nationalized the companies, and they put ITT out of business to a certain extent.
The company of ITT had an interest in getting copper from Chile.
The U.S. government had vested interest in keeping communications.
So the government needed phones and telegraphs and everything else, which were produced by ITT.
So it was an interface, and there is to this.
day. People don't realize that much of almost the vast majority of what the U.S. government buys and
uses is produced by private corporations.
Sure.
Electric boat, General Dynamics, Raytheon, et cetera, et cetera.
DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, I believe that's what it is.
And I've done a lot of stuff with them, a lot of stuff, like an invisible suit.
We made this invisible sniper suit using light fiber optic and...
That's awesome.
Oh, they do crazy stuff. Does it work?
It worked pretty well, but I don't know what happened.
I mean, you know, I don't know where it is right now.
Yeah, current.
They do crazy stuff.
You can't see it. That was kind of a generic.
Could be a guy sitting in the corner where one right now.
Like a Monsanto, Gillies to, right?
Yeah.
It's just going on.
You step on the carpet and you're like, what the hell?
There's a person under you.
I mean, it seems possible.
It was kind of like that thing in Predator.
You know, when Predators got the Colky thing?
Yeah.
It was very much like that.
It had sensors that would read what's around you and it would feed it to the fiber optics.
Yeah.
It was actually very, very good.
Just projects what's behind it to the front.
Here's another thing.
I remember I had this project one time.
And if you shoot from a helicopter at something, it's hard because the helicopter's moving.
If you're shooting at a boat, the boat's moving, the helicopter and the boat's moving, the odds of hitting something are small.
Yeah.
It's bad.
Yeah, yeah.
So a buddy of mine in Hollywood, a movie director, was whatever.
I called him up and I said, how do you stabilize the cameras?
Yeah, that's a good idea.
In a helicopter, and he said, go see this guy in the valley.
I fly from Quantico, Virginia, out of L.A., go over the 405, and I end up in this guy's place.
It's the same guy that invented the jetpack.
The guy flying around in the jetpack?
The water one.
I don't know if it was water.
I think it was air.
The first was air.
It became now it's like you go to Cancun and you drink two margaritas and go for a ride back in the day.
But it was a fascinating guy.
So we pioneered a sniper platform based on what was the Steadicam concept, which generates artificial mass with inertia.
It just spins a wheel and it stabilizes.
Anyway, the point of story is that going back to all these organizations that, uh,
many of them are private.
They produce money
and the interface
between the application
from the federal government
and the private industry
behind them,
that interface is massive,
massive, massive money.
And that's what I wanted a piece of.
Who's the guy that overthrew the government?
His name is Harold Janine.
Google him.
Harold Janine,
it's widely written about,
but anyway, they killed,
I think it was Salvador
or anything, they sent,
they being the Chilean government,
sent a hit team after him
and they blew up
their offices building in New York, and he went to hide out in an estate that he had in Northern
New Hampshire. So I grew up. He hired a guy named Jack McCone, who I call Jack. It was John A.
McCone, I think, but he was the acting director of the CIA, and Harold Janine hired him
to come to work and made him a board member at ITT. So I grew up with these guys, spies and the money
behind them, just hanging out in this house in New Hampshire. And it was an interesting interface
as my life moved forward because I had that perspective in youth. So he paid a
is to overthrow the government in Chile, and in return, he gets access to copper and the CIA
gets to overthrow the government in Chile. Yeah, but the CIA, per se, did not have an interest
in overthrowing the government of Chile. Okay. The U.S. government had a strategic national
security interest in having communications. At the time, in order to have communications,
you need to have wires. In order to have wires, you needed copper. And where do you get the copper,
you get it in Chile? They needed to make that friendly enough to buy the copper, basically.
They shut the copper off. They nationalize the interest. I just mean,
they wanted to undo that.
The government?
Yes.
Right.
So who's the mechanism for the federal government at that time?
Right.
The CIA.
You're not going to send the postal service after them.
Right.
You're not going to send a marshal service after them.
So the CIA put it together.
But the money in these things, Jordan, we can't talk about this in one conversation.
But the money is fascinating.
The dumb question is, why doesn't the CIA just pay to have the government overthrown?
Why do they need Harold's money?
Because the way you spend it.
Remember, it's a perfect example.
Remember the Oliver North thing with the birthday.
cake and the Sandinistas.
I was just going to bring that up because I had Oliver North on the show and I asked him about
this and he gave me the most ridiculously like upside down answer ever.
Look, he's not going to say it, but I am.
I'm going to tell you.
Not that anybody cares because this is ancient history.
Does it still go on?
Of course it does.
Of course it still goes on.
I mean, ask anybody, ask a private first class who is in Inselink Air Force base or whatever,
a joint base about pallets of $100 bills flying into Iraq and Afghanistan for 20 years.
The world operates in cash.
We buy stuff.
It's so much easier to pay money for something than it is to blow it up.
Sometimes you've got to do both.
But the world, my exposure to how the world of money interface with a government world
of intelligence operations was the most fascinating thing I've done in my life and finding
out how to work in that world and how complex that world is.
And on a very, really pedestrian level, you could see it in Timor because the money was coming
in from China.
and it was, you know, a U.N. guy from Africa would take his money back to Africa.
He'd take all those fake dollars back to Africa.
But my Uncle Harold growing up was bigger money with bigger operations.
And today, the money and the bigger operations are astronomically exponentially larger.
Private money in the government intelligence community around the world, in my life, that's the most fascinating thing I've ever been involved.
Yeah.
Give me another example of this because I think, I mean, is there another sort of common example?
I'll give you an example that I'll try not to get in trouble with, but I help build a company that had a technology.
And it was a very cool technology.
And it appealed to intelligence agencies.
So vague.
But I don't want to be because I really, I love the guys.
Yeah.
The company still exists to a certain extent.
Okay.
And I don't want to step on a bunch of cranks.
But I'll just talk conceptually about how it goes.
Let's say you come up with a phone and this phone could, it could count to 10.
Okay.
So you find all the intelligence agencies in the world that want to count to 10, and you label them.
And because of my connections, I could get a hold of them.
So I would go to Mozambique.
I would go to Israel.
I would go to Lebanon.
I would go, well, maybe not Lebanon, because they're exclusion lists.
There are countries that you can't talk to.
Yeah, Iran or whatever.
I never talked to Iran.
But did I talk to elements within Iraq?
Yes.
Did I talk to countries that did not necessarily have great relationships with Israel?
Yes.
because they all want it.
And it's business.
That's the way business works.
I mean, if you think that Raytheon is not selling missiles to other places, you're out of your mind, right?
I mean, that's the way it is.
It has to be approved on some level.
Anyways, I've got some crazy arms steel stories for you.
Yeah.
So I have this watch and a watch sell can count to 10.
What people don't know about the watch that can count to 10 that I'm going to sell to you.
Let's say pick a country.
You're the intelligence agency for Turkey.
Let's go to Turkey.
So I was a former FBI agent who had work.
worked for intelligence community, including the CIA.
And it was fairly widely known because I'd talked about it on CNN or CNBC and NBC.
And I did it for about five years.
So it's not like I was a secret.
I'm not saying I was famous, but I was not a secret, right?
So I ended up in this office in Ankara.
I didn't end up there.
I went there all the time.
I was in Ankara all the time.
Anchor Turkey looks just like Santa Monica.
So I end up in this office with this guy who was a retired military officer.
I'm not going to say his rank because I don't want to get them in trouble because you can get in real trouble dealing with these guys.
So we're in this place. It's on the second floor of a beach house in Santa Monica. So I'm sitting there with a buddy of mine who was crazy out there guy. He's a full on arms merchant who's dead now so we can talk about him. Okay. But he was very high up in the Republican Party of the United States government. He was married to a woman who was a name. Okay. So we're on a couch. And this military officer who's retired, who's putting the whole thing together is over here.
French doors that open this nice sunny day.
Santa Monica.
These two guys come in, and this one guy looks like something straight out of a Van Damme movie, right?
Chuck Norris movie, right?
He's got the chest hair.
He's got a cheap suit.
He's got gold chains.
He's got, like, food.
Turkish odd job, basically.
He's got crumbs in his chest hair.
And he's got a walleye.
Like, I say walleye.
My dad is a walleye.
So I'm not trying to.
Is that like a lazy eye?
Yeah, yeah.
So he's looking at me like this.
But the other guys, the other eyes looking over here.
And I'm trying to figure out what he's looking at because I know he's loaded, right?
I know he's carrying a gun.
Sure.
And I'm thinking, I'm not sure how this thing is going to go.
And I was going to their organization, the organization they called it, right?
There was an intelligence component.
So I'm there selling this thing, the watch that counts to 10 with this guy.
And then this little tiny guy that's with him as the money guy.
And he's doing all the talking while odd job is staring at me with this, you know.
One of his eyes.
With one of his eyes.
And I'm not trying to make fun of this.
It was hysterical.
It was funny. I mean, I was trying not to laugh the whole time because it was so stupid, but it was so real. It was bad. So anyways, I'm there to sell the watch that counts to 10. All of a sudden, my buddy over here, who's a real guy in government, all of a sudden, they start talking about buying this very specific brand of machine guns and proximity fuses for projectable ordinance. And at some point in that thing, I go, wait a minute, we're not selling watches. We're here. We're selling proximity fuses for ordinance. And,
various types of machine gun. Then they stopped talk, whatever else. They were going to Sudan. So they're
talking about delivery to a certain place. This big arms deal is going down at this nice looking
house in Santa Monica that's in Ankara, Turkey. And so we do this deal and we say, okay, then we go to this
meeting that I was really there for to sell the watch. It counts to 10. Is this making sense?
So far, so good. Yeah. Good. So I know this meeting that we're going to is with Erdogan's
intelligence organization. I know that. They
know I'm coming. I walk in the room and there's a conference table, 10 chairs. Any conference room
in the world could be. Yeah. There's a board and I'm going to make my presentation on the board.
I walk in as three guys at the table sitting down and there's a guy standing over on the side looking out the window.
Nefarious looking dope, right? You make these assessments very simple one very quickly. There's nothing. I mean, anybody could. You know the game.
So the guys turn around and one of them stands up and shakes my hand. The other two just,
stare at me. It's all posturing. And so we go through the whole thing and I'm making my pitch
and this guy from the window turns around like 45 minutes into this conversation. The guy at
the window turns around and looks at me and he goes in perfect English, almost on X and then English
says, why would I listen to a former FBI agent and it works for the CIA who talked about all the
stuff on NBC come in here and sell me this watch that counts to 10? And I said because all your
enemies already have. He has to. What he didn't know is that the watch that counts to 10
has a backdoor in the service agreement that downloads me everything he does. Right. Yeah, sure.
Just a Trojan horse. So does that happen constantly in private industry? Yes, of course it does. You
buy a phone and, you know, Nokia or an iPhone wants to listen on whatever else. Tim Cook's listening to
listen to our conversation right now. Exactly, but that's a world we live in. Yeah. But what happens is
that you get in these situations where somebody decides that it's not a good thing that they're doing with that.
And then private industry decides to go in a certain direction that does not jive with the Biden administration going to the Trump administration because all of the intelligence objectives change.
Or a general gets fired, another one gets hired, and things change.
It becomes outrageously complex because it's very difficult to tell what the common denominator is at any given time.
So you see that in business all the time.
You start a hotel.
It goes out of fashion.
Another one comes up.
A new shoe.
A podcast is up.
A podcast is down.
It's the world.
But when you do it and the consequence is you lose a lot of money in investments.
That's one thing.
When the consequence is you just don't come home, that's a little different.
And I like that.
I like that consequence.
You like that consequence?
Yes.
Like it's more exciting to you?
I don't know if it's exciting.
It's more complex.
I like the problem solving.
mechanism that goes along with it.
I see. So what are you doing now to scratch that itch now that you don't live in East Timor?
Write books.
Is that doing it for you?
It's not doing it in the same way.
Yeah, I can imagine.
But here's, I'm not pitching a new book, but I got to say this.
You know that story, the Brian Coburger case in Idaho?
Oh, is he the one, the guy who killed the college kids in the house?
Yes, pled guilty to killing four college kids in Idaho.
Yeah.
Horrible crime, tragedy in every imaginable way.
and it is not what you think.
Say more about that.
I've got to be careful what I say.
But it's widely talked about it.
It's probably the most widely true crime case in quite some time.
For sure, yeah.
And the police department, meaning the Moscow Police Department,
the Idaho State Police, various organizations have given out a lot of information.
But under a 1964 Supreme Court case Brady v. Maryland,
the prosecution has to give all of their information to the defense,
meaning everything, sculpatory information and everything.
the defense has to farm that out to get experts interpret it.
Like we all know about the DNA in a knife sheath.
We know about the cell phone tower pings.
We know about the white car that was supported.
We know Bill Thompson's case.
The prosecutor, we know about his case because he said at the hearing,
the plea change hearing what those things were.
So a lot of this information is out there.
What people don't know is that files about 59,000 separate items comprising hundreds
of thousands.
Well, I don't exaggerate.
well over 200,000 bits of information data points in this thing.
Yeah.
And hypothetically speaking, if somebody looked at that and had six months to analyze that,
it is astonishing what people don't know and what actually happened.
I find the consequence extraordinary because you have the murders of four young people
and you have a guy in prison for the rest of his life who pleaded guilty to this.
And when people find out what happened, it was shocking.
Yeah.
I have no theories.
speculate anything. All I do is line up documents as they were found and presented. I don't know how
to explain it, except that it is baffling. Only at Gitmo do you find McDonald's and moral crisis in the
same zip code. That is a weird combo meal. Speaking of mixed feelings, here's a quick word from the
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It is that important that you support those who support the show. Now for the rest of my conversation
with Chris Whitcomb. It seems like a wide departure from setting up a security company in East Timor
or meeting the landlords in Afghanistan. You're like, next stop, true crime podcast. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah. No, it's not a podcast.
I'm just kidding. I know. I'm kidding. But it's like in the similar vein, right?
Yeah, you stay busy, man. Yeah.
You got to find something.
So the complexity of that is what appeals to you.
The complexity appeals to me. And I did another one. I did another, another book that's coming out before or after that. I don't know, a cold case, 32 year old cold case in Springfield, Missouri and found the guy in solve the crime. And that was the same thing.
You found the guy in solve the crime?
Yes.
Really?
Yeah, in writing the book. Yes.
Can you speak to that a little bit? That's actually kind of crazy.
Okay.
Okay, 1992, three women disappear from a house in Springfield, Missouri. It's called the Springfield
3. Google it. There are a very large number of blogs, podcasts, documentaries. It's been everything
48 hours. Oprah Winfrey show was a very, very widely known case. 33 years after the fact,
I was looking, I was saying, what am I going to do now? And I got access to the entire file.
The case has never been closed in 33 years. The police department kept it open so they would not have to
disclose information.
If a case is open, it's not discoverable under freedom of information laws for your requests.
Right. That's a journalist like us used to go, you have to tell me this. And they go, no, I don't. And then we say, I'm going to compel you to do it. So the way around that is to go, all right, this is an ongoing investigation. Can't talk about it. Well, that was the case for 33 years. Yeah.
But I was friends with people that did the initial investigation. One of them took a bootleg file of the entire case and had it in his garage for 33 years. Wow. And he says, go get him, kid. Wow. So I started going through it. And.
And it was very obvious, very quickly what happened.
And it's taken all this time to get the police department.
They're fully engaged with it right now.
It was a mother, her daughter, and her daughter's friend disappeared after graduation on a Saturday into Sunday morning.
Disappeared.
And no clue has ever been found.
Nothing until now.
You can't tell us what happened or did it?
I don't want to tell you right now because that would blow the book and I don't have the publication date on it.
Oh, it's not out yet.
Okay.
No, no, no, no, no.
No.
No, but I will say this.
The case is not that far behind John Bonae Ramsey in terms of people that know the case.
Yeah, sure.
And it's really fascinating, compelling.
And the solution, what actually happened, I went out and interviewed one of the two guys that were involved in it.
And the truth about what happened in this case is stunning.
I got to get handed to you.
Whenever I see these complex investigations, I just think, man, somebody's looking at all these grains of sand and just arranging them into a picture.
I don't have the patience.
They don't.
Oh, yeah, that's what I'm trying to do.
Yeah.
I don't have patience, but I'm disciplined.
Like, I don't have any patience.
But if I've got a matter of hand, I can be very focused on it.
This is so funny, right?
Because it's like, oh, what are you going to do when you retire?
Oh, I'm going to do jigsaw puzzles.
You see these old people doing jigsaw puzzles.
And you're like, yeah, me too.
But what you're doing is you take it.
But I want 200,000 pieces and no picture.
And no picture on the front.
Just white.
That's right.
And then you're going to make a page.
So you're like the Chris Whitcomb version of the little old lady doing a thousand piece
jigsaw puzzle.
Yeah, I don't know what.
I don't know what Chris Wickham is a version of anything.
I have no clue, right?
Yeah, yeah.
People come on and they're a rapper or they're a sports star or there are a celebrity, whatever else, and their life makes sense.
Mine doesn't make sense.
No.
It doesn't.
That's true.
Man, I have a question for you.
You mentioned in the book, so you started doing those extraordinary renditions.
And first of all, tell us what that means, because a lot of people will think, oh, I've heard of that, but I don't know what that is.
There are two laws under the Reagan administration, one 1884 and 1986.
I think it was like the diplomatic security act or something.
They're very obscure laws, but you can Google them.
And I talked about them.
I cite them in the book.
Okay.
But at that time, the government looked for terrorists as a, they wanted to arrest them and prosecute them.
And prior to 9-11, there were a lot of them.
When I left the FBI, the entity that I worked in the FBI, we classified 66 different organizations as terrorist organizations.
Okay.
Including, I talked to somebody the other day about what's going on in Gaza with Israel.
I've been to PLO headquarters in Gaza with Yasser Arafat with a machine gun under my jacket pocket.
I'll show you a picture of it after this if you're interested in it.
Definitely.
So I had a lot of exposure doing these really out there things.
But when the U.S. government decided somebody was bad and they needed to come back for justice, they would usually be hiding in a country that did not want to give them back.
Yeah.
So we'd have to go get them.
So you don't just walk up, knock on the door and show them an FBI badge and say, could you come with me, sir?
It doesn't work that way.
So I will just use this as an example.
There's a very famous case that people can Google where I think it was 12 CIA employees were
indicted in Italy for an operation that went bad.
And that was very, very widely publicized.
So it would be that type of an operation.
You put together a surreptitious entry into a reasonably denied area with the objective
of arresting somebody, bringing them back to the United States and trying them
and putting them in jail.
That's the idea.
When you go into a country like that, you just don't show up and stay at a Marriott.
Well, actually, you do show up and stay at a Marriott.
Okay, good.
But you're selling, you're selling like tripods for cameras or something, right?
Yeah.
Got that titanium status.
So that rendition means the extraction of someone charged under U.S. law at the time,
charged under U.S. law, to be brought back without the necessary,
without the consent of the government of the country, you need to go in to get them.
Gotcha.
Okay.
And you say in the book, if you want someone tortured, you send them to Syria.
If you want them disappeared, you send them to Egypt.
If you want them interrogated, you send him to Jordan.
The uncomfortable question is, who gets tortured, who gets disappeared, and who just gets interrogated?
What kind of people get put in each place?
Well, they're all bad.
Well, I would hope so.
Yeah.
Well, that's not true.
Because, look, I've been to Guantanamo Bay.
Yeah.
And I've seen a lot of people that I didn't necessarily think were bad.
And I can tell you this, doesn't matter who I thought was bad.
Somebody else made that decision.
Yeah.
And a whole lot of the time they were wrong.
We all know about enhanced interrogation.
Yeah.
And the compliance gestures and sick and a doberman pincher on somebody with or when women's underwear on their head.
The abuses are widely written about.
I was never the person who made that decision.
Wasn't there a 13-year-old kid at Guantanamo Bay?
Yes.
I mean, how can that guy be that?
There's no scenario in which that case is.
I wrote about most of these stories I read about in the book.
But when I went to Guantanamo Bay, it was surreal.
When I was a little kid, there was this thing called...
a TV show and this person was trapped on an island and they were trying to escape and this bubble
would come over and like wrap them up every time to escape. A surreal island when nothing made sense,
that was Guantanamo Bay. And I went down there and I saw how these prisoners were being held,
who were they were, what their process was like. And it would take five of these episodes just to
explain that because a lot of the people doing these interrogations, I had trained. I taught
interrogation for the FBI to the CIA for a short period of time. But anyways, looking around
this thing with a government minder, they'd show you, now we do this and they have a balanced
meal and they get a Bible or they get a Koran and this is, you know, there's an arrow pointing
to Mecca. And then you go out there at night and you hear him screaming. I mean, it sounded like
it was hell on earth in certain ways, right? And everybody that's walking around would greet each other
not by saying, hey, how are you doing this morning? Good morning. They would say, fair firm and impartial.
It was this mantra.
Everybody,
creepy.
You just walk around and everybody you see goes,
Fair firm and impartial.
You go, what?
It's like a 1984 scene.
Yeah, it was just, the whole thing was surreal.
Those were stupid examples.
Rit large, it was bizarre.
However, they had one little compound
set off to the side.
I think they called it Camp Aguana,
but it was a house and a building
and it was completely surrounded by,
it looked like a tennis court.
You know, the 10-foot fence
with a green cloth
that you have around tennis courts,
You know what I mean?
Oh, yeah.
It's like a green tarp.
Yeah.
So that you couldn't see in.
But they wouldn't admit at the time that it was a 13-year-old, but they had three, at the time they had three kids that were 13 and younger.
That's there.
Why?
But listen to this story.
So the guy that ran Guantanamo Bay when I was there, his name was General Jeffrey Miller.
And he left Guantanamo Bay to take over Abu Ghrae prison where they had the dogs on guys, same guy.
Yeah.
And he had kids of his own.
I don't know this.
I talked to him, but I didn't ask him this question.
But I was told by one of the people that worked for him that he was upset that these kids were being held in this on Guantanamo Bay.
Yeah.
So we cut a big square out of the green cloth in the 10 foot high concertino wall where they were imprisoned 12,000 miles from home so that they could look out into the ocean so it would make them feel better.
That's just so it's such a, it's so horrible.
You just see things that in those situations, in my experience, in my experience, you see so many
things that don't make sense so they don't end up in the New York Times and they don't end up
on CNN. I mean, they do working at jobs. I'm not knocking those news agencies. I'm saying that
the craziest shit that you see living in a life like mine, eventually it all just seems like a
few silly Jerry universe, you know, it all seems nonsensical. That's true. Man, your book,
The one I read will be linked to the show notes.
And then the new one's coming out sometime.
One of them is coming out in February and one I think is coming out in April.
Okay.
So we won't link to the anonymous mail is the one here.
That's the one out.
And, you know, I really, I wanted to come and talk to you and you got to write a book to do it.
You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger show with geopolitics analyst Peter Zion.
We're kind of in this soft moment in history where everyone's holding their breath and wondering if the next time there's an incident the U.S. is going to intervene or not.
and I would argue we are not.
Safety on the waves is what allows us to have the East Asian manufacturing model.
Less than 1% of that shipping happens on land.
And that is a recipe for 1910s and 1930s-style conflict and competition.
Countries are increasingly finding in their best interest
to kind of hoard what consumption they do have and not allow trade access to it
and then producing more locally.
We were moving this way before the Ukraine War,
before the Chinese started to break down and before the German industrial model started to implode.
This has just sped everything up. So we'll probably see significant drops in agricultural output
next year, especially in the second half of next year, which should suggest that we're going to
have significant problems with food supply on a global scale in the months that followed.
I mean, the food issue is the issue that gives me nightmares because I don't see a way to fix it.
The biggest loser by far is China. Everything about China's functionality is dependent on a globalization.
and a demographic moment that has passed.
I think we're in the final decade of the European Union,
because without that Russian energy, there is no German manufacturing model.
And without the German manufacturing model,
you don't have the money that is used to keep the EU in existence.
The pace of the disintegration here is really difficult to wrap your mind around.
We've had a really good run the last 75 years.
It was never going to last.
It's going to be a rough ride.
So anyone who thinks this is going to be easy is wrong in every population.
possible way. For more about how globalization and our way of life will change dramatically in the
coming decade, check out episode 781 of the Jordan Harbinger Show. Man, what a ride from FBI
standoffs and warlords in Afghanistan, a black magic in East Timor, in a full-blown identity crisis
somewhere between God and a surfboard in Indonesia. Man, Chris Whitcomb's life is proof that you can
run 100 covert ops, dodge death a dozen times, and still wake up one morning realizing the real battle
is the one going on in your own head.
Some people are just built different.
All things Chris Wickham will indeed be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
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