The Rest Is Classified - 117. Epstein Files Declassified: Mossad, Israel and Ghislaine Maxwell (Ep 2)
Episode Date: January 14, 2026It has been alleged that Robert Maxwell, father of convicted child sex offender Ghislaine, had connections to the Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad. Through these links, some have suggested that Max...well recruited Jeffrey Epstein, who then also became an Israeli asset. While this has never been confirmed by Mossad, conspiracy theories are rife. In their second episode on Epstein’s intelligence connections, David and Gordon examine the validity of these theories and answer the question of whether Epstein was actually a spy. ------------------- Make someone a Declassified Club Member this year – go deeper into the world of espionage with exclusive Q&As, interviews with top intelligence insiders, regular livestreams, ad-free listening, early access to episodes and live show tickets, and weekly deep dives into original spy stories. Members also get curated reading lists, special book discounts, prize draws, and access to our private chat community. Just go to therestisclassified.com or join on Apple Podcasts. ------------------- EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restisclassified Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee ------------------- Email: therestisclassified@goalhanger.com Instagram: @restisclassified Video Editor: Oli Oakley Social Producer: Emma Jackson Producer: Becki Hills Head of History: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to the rest is classified.
I'm Gordon Carrera in Ambibin-Mla-Blaski.
And welcome to the second episode.
in our two-part series, which is really examining one question, I guess, David, which is,
was the financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein working for or with an intelligence
service? A simple question, but a really interesting and complicated one as well, isn't it?
Well, last time we left off with a discussion of, I mean, really who Epstein was this theory,
which has different flavors to it, of how he may have.
been connected to or working for an intelligence service. And we in particular went deep on what I
think is the most, maybe most common, but certainly the most salacious version of that theory,
which is that he was working probably for the Mossad, Israel's Foreign Intelligence Service,
to run a, essentially a blackmail ring out of some of his properties, gathering compromise on
influential politicians and
business leaders. And so we
went into that theory. I think we both
offered our view
that that theory
doesn't hold a lot of water
and there's a lot of reasons to look at the risk
reward calculation that afforded intelligence
service would have
would have to do when evaluating
him and kind of saying this doesn't
make a lot of sense. Put aside also the fact that
there aren't any facts to back
it up. But we left, Gordon,
in with me reading some messages from former CIA officers who were asked this question of,
if you put the criminality aside, which is a big thing to do, which is, which is.
If you put the criminality aside, is he an interesting target for an intelligence agency?
And I think this time we're going to go deeper to evaluate, you know, how he could have been
valuable to an intelligence service and, more importantly, whether there's any evidence
that he actually did work with or for an intelligence service.
Yeah, because we should be clear.
It's a theory.
You know, the absence of facts is one of the issues with this, that nothing has really been
proven.
So we are really just kind of exploring some of the theories which are out there,
and they're certainly out there, and they're kind of arguably gaining more currency.
And you're right.
I think we looked at that theory about running a blackmail ring.
But there is a kind of wider question is, which I think the comments you collected from other people in the intelligence world are interesting, which is might there be some kind of other relationship or he'd have with the intelligence world?
And what could that have been?
And as I said, we're going to kind of look at it as a theory.
And it's interesting because, you know, a lot of the theories relate not so much to him as to Jelaine Maxwell, who we talked about last time, his sometime point.
partner, associate, someone who was also deeply involved in his activities, as we know.
Accomplice.
I mean, a criminal accomplice.
Yeah, exactly.
And she becomes a very interesting figure in this, because in that theory, as I said,
let's just remind people it's a theory.
The idea that he might be linked, particularly to Massad, the Israeli intelligence services,
often goes through her.
And the reason is her father.
It's worth looking at, I think, in a bit of detail, who he was, because he did have.
ties to the intelligence services. And then it's sometimes that connection which leads people
back through Jeffrey Epstein. So let's spend a few minutes, I think, on this remarkable figure
who was Robert Maxwell. He probably isn't that well known in the US. And I think in my day,
he was very well known in the UK. I mean, he was on a par with Rupert Murdoch as one of the great
press barons, but a much more kind of colourful and dangerous character, I think, than Rupert
Murdoch, as we'll see. And the really good book to read on this is called Fall, and the title
will become clear later, The Mysterious Life and Death of Robert Maxwell by John Preston.
It's an excellent biography which came out a few years ago. So I think just to set him up,
extraordinary character, larger than life, born into a different name, Jan, in a poor Yiddish-speaking
Orthodox Jewish family in Czechoslovakia in 1923. He's big, he's tough, he's smart. During the Second World War,
he's still young though, it's occupied by the Nazis. He joins the underground to help people
flee to the West, still a teenager, claims he kind of escapes after being captured. There's a lot
of myth making around his early life, it's fair to say. He arrives in Britain and reinvents himself.
Gets married, changes his religion, changes his age, as this John Preston says, changes religion,
age, nationality and name in a very short period of time, which, you know, it's quite a lot to do,
joins the British Army during the war, sees action in Normandy.
He turns up at one village in Normandy dressed up as a German major
because he's going to kind of try and do reconnaissance work behind enemy lines or close to enemy lines.
You know, he often war disguises, change names, spoke many languages.
He ends up getting presented with the military cross by Field Marshal Montgomery.
So he is kind of something of a war hero.
But then at the end of the war, he learns his mother, his grandfather, three of his siblings,
his father, all died in Auschwitz.
Wow.
And this will be a part of his story.
He's then in the Intelligence Corps for the British military, serves in Germany,
uses a pseudonym to protect his identities.
You can already see this kind of, he's in that kind of spy world to some extent,
although officially.
And for six months he's Captain Stone, who is part of a team interrogating German prisoners
of war and others who'd worked for the Nazi regime.
Now, you know, there's going to be really.
rumors that he's a spy for the Russians, for the Israelis, but at this point, he is kind of an
intelligence officer for the Brits, military intelligence, and he's doing missions, it appears
back into Czechoslovakia, you know, his former homeland, which is now under communist
control. John Preston makes this point, you know, everyone knows that film, the third man by
Graham Green, one of the kind of classics. Evocative of Harry Lyme, isn't he? Exactly.
Yeah. Yeah. That's the kind of character he is. That kind of slightly slippery character
and also perhaps, you know, moving on the edges of the kind of black market in that world,
wants to make his fortune.
So after he's left the military, he gets into scientific publishing.
Now, there are claims from one former MI6 officer never confirmed in his memoir
that MI6 might have even played a role, a helping hand, with his early business life.
Because, you know, through this scientific publishing, which is kind of across Europe,
he's able to travel around Europe.
You know, he's able to travel to Moscow and meet interesting people.
And he's going to become incredibly rich as well, thanks to this publishing empire.
I meant the wrong genre, Gordon.
Scientific publishing, David.
Who would have thought?
Scientific publishing is where the cash is.
I think it might have been in the late 40s and 50s and 60s, I'm afraid.
I think your chance may have might have gone.
But December, 1961, his wife gives birth to, I mean, she's going to have nine children in all.
They're not all survived.
but the youngest daughter is Jelaine.
And soon after that,
you know, her father, Robert Maxwell,
becomes an MP, a Labour Party MP.
I mean, I quite like the detail.
He decides it's probably best not to be chauffefered round
in a Rolls-Royce during the campaign
because it might not, if you're a Labour Party MP,
it might not make it look like you're a man of the people.
So, you know, he only does six years in Parliament
before he loses his seat.
But he's becoming a press baron.
He actually battles with Rupert Murdoch,
to buy the news of the world newspaper, loses out to Murdoch, but eventually buys the Daily Mirror,
which at that time is one of the big, still is a big, but it was a hugely influential paper.
So he's a media publishing magnate, at least on paper, he's a billionaire.
He's travelling around Eastern Europe.
He's meeting Soviet, Eastern bloc leaders.
And again, this is all the interesting parallels, I think, with Epstein is.
This guy is a networker.
You know, he is a brilliant networker who's moving among world leaders, you know, prime ministers
in Britain all know him, including Thatcher, even though he's a kind of labour figure.
He's incredibly well connected.
And with people like that, people do go, well, maybe he's a spy.
You know, it's one of the things that happens.
So what is Robert Maxwell's connection then to kind of his Jewish heritage?
Well, that's what's interesting, is that he seems to go on a trip to Israel around 1984,
which changes his life because he effectively rediscovered his Jewish background.
he also maybe feels some deep sense of not just remorse but guilt about the fact he'd survived
and much of the rest of his family had died in the camps.
And so that trip seems to change him.
And he rediscovers his kind of link to his Jewish pass and to his faith.
And he starts to go into business with Israeli partners.
He invested in newspapers there, pharmaceuticals, high tech in Israel.
And according to the John Preston biography,
starts to pass on useful information that comes his way to Mossad to the Israeli intelligence services.
So it's around that point in the mid-80s.
Previously having been rumoured to be a Russian agent, which I don't think he was, a Soviet KGB
agent or a British intelligence agent, now the rumours start that no, he's linked to
Mossad and to the Israelis.
And there is clearly some kind of connection there, although it's different, I think it's worth
saying, from being a kind of formal agent, if you like.
That's the part of this that it's worth stressing it because when we hear somebody's a spy,
you immediately think of some kind of formal relationship in which there's a handling officer,
there's tasking, there's money changing hands.
The picture that Preston at least paints in the biography is that if Maxwell came upon
something that he thought would be useful to the Israelis, he would pass it a lot.
long, right? Not that he was a recruited and handled agent. Yeah, exactly. A real distinction,
I think, between those two. The verbiage can overlap, but they're different things. Yeah. And what you get
is a picture of an influential globe-trotting businessman making deals. And as we kind of put it,
I think, in the first episode, spy adjacent. You know, he's in that world. I mean, there are some
weird stories as well about where, you know, at one point, the foreign editor of his newspaper is
supposedly involved in gun running along with a former Israeli spy, which, you know, I think
it's fair to say it's fairly unusual, speaking as a former journalist myself, that, you know,
the foreign editor, I don't think many foreign editors get involved in gun running, but that was
one of the claims.
What is the BBC, Gordon, other than a massive gun running operation for British intelligence?
I refute that allegation entirely, and has never been and never will be.
But anyway, back to Robert Maxwell.
I mean, also, you know, this is another one of those details, which has these kind of,
are interesting echoes between, I think, Robert Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein, because we talked
about Jeffrey Epstein wiring up his properties. Well, Robert Maxwell did that, and he actually
bugged the Daily Mirror offices and the heads of department of the Daily Mirror and his own
offices with concealed microphones, which could help him with negotiations. I note, Alistair Campbell once
worked for The Daily Mirror, and I think in the days of Robert Maxwell, just right at the end.
So I don't know if he ever had, if he ever was bugged, but Alistair, if you're listening, you could,
You could let us know whether you ever had any of your sensitive conversations listened into by Robert Maxra.
It would be quite interesting.
But he recorded all of these on a 90-minute cassettes, you know, with a tape recorder hidden in his desk.
This was back before Alistair looked like you have any progosan, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, he's not.
He's another thing which he's refuted.
This is another one of your wild accusations, which he's definitely was not in, I don't think he was, I don't think he was that impressed by it.
But, you know, he's got a sense of humor.
No, I mean, he was not, he was merely unimpressed.
He seemed, I would say, agitated by the claim.
Yeah, by the claim that he was, he bore any resemblance to warlord slash chef,
you have getting a precaution.
Although, hold on, Gord, because I, you know, I may be missing this from Texas
because our intrepid producer Becky is noted in the chat that Alistair agreed eventually
that he, there was a little bit of resemblance.
He bore some resemblance that we wore him down.
Yeah.
So maybe you were right.
So Maxwell was there.
He was kind of bugging his own staff, you know, using it to help him with business negotiations.
You know, I love this detail that he would then listen to the tapes alone in his penthouse apartment.
And he would listen to them obsessively.
And he was by this stage, you know, later in life, a kind of massive physical presence.
But also quite odd.
One of the things we should will come back to, he was a kind of bully.
Very, very bullying of his staff, of his family.
very aggressive, very unpredictable.
And this is, you know, vision of this guy just listening to surveillance tapes in a lonely way in his penthouse.
I think, you know, while supposedly being a billionaire, but the supposedly is important because all the time, particularly by the late 80s, he is looting the Daily Mirror's pension fund, all the money that belongs to the pensioners or the people who are going to get a pension from that newspaper.
He was looting millions and millions and millions to kind of prop up his businesses, which are on the verge of collapse.
And people were starting to find out.
That's why Alistair had to do the rest of his politics, right?
Because he lost his pension.
Again, you could ask him that.
His daily bearer of pension was gone.
Yeah, I'm going to get sued.
I'm going to get sued by Alistair.
By Alistair, yeah.
And I mean, he also makes that move to try and go to New York.
I mean, he buys the New York Daily News.
I haven't realized this.
It has a big party on his boat in Manhattan.
And the boat called the Lady Jolain, named Ariré,
after his daughter. And the decor was described as 1970s Playboy Baroque, which is, you know,
yeah, here's a style, not one I'm accustomed to. It's not how the Carrera house is decorated.
I think that's fair to say. Yeah, but actually the video we're looking at now for those watching,
this is the only part of your house, Gordon, that's not decorated in 70s Playboy Baroque.
Yeah, the books behind me.
Yes. The baths up, the, the baths up with the golden.
and, you know, bare feet.
That's not in the frame right now.
Although I look at this detail on that when he has this big party on the Lady Jelaine,
when he's bought the New York Daily News, is actually Donald Trump is invited but doesn't come to the party.
It's kind of interesting party, but it gives you a sense that this is a guy who's moving in those circles.
But soon after that, November 1991, he's on his yacht.
He's on the Lady Jolaine off the Canary Islands early on the morning of November 5th.
People are calling him, they can't reach him.
the crew go into his room on the boat.
They find his bed empty.
They search the yacht.
There's no sign.
Later that day, search teams will find his body in the water floating face up.
His hands clenched together.
Now, this will also start a kind of flood of conspiracy theories, frankly.
You don't say, Gordon.
You don't say.
Well, they also, and they center the conspiracy theories, many of them,
center on, you know, again, surprise, surprise, the idea that he was murdered by Mossad
after they had tried to blackmail him. And to be honest, I can't quite make sense of the
theory. Yeah, no, no, it took me a while to understand it. Supposedly, the theory was
he had been running a must, this is a theory, just to be absolutely clear, that the claim
behind this conspiracy theory was that he'd been selling some kind of software for the Israelis,
which secretly allowed access to kind of information.
So it was a kind of Israeli intelligence operation.
But then eventually his finances are on the verge of collapse
because of the pension fund.
Everything's going to be exposed.
He's in deep trouble.
And so the theory goes that he threatens Mossad
with publicly disclosing this operation
unless they bail him out.
They don't and they kill him.
Now, that I want to just kind of put it out there, that that is the theory, but I don't think anyone seriously buys it.
I mean, there are lots of, you know, reasons why that's not possible.
I mean, the theory is that Mossad agents somehow get onto his yacht, inject him with a poison and tip him overboard.
I mean, let's be honest, it's not how you do it anyway if you were Mossad, I think,
even if there was any kind of substance, the idea that they might have done it.
It just doesn't make sense.
He's also given, I think he's, I mean, he's given a state funeral, isn't he?
And, and I mean, he's buried on the, on the Mount of Olives.
So I don't know.
It doesn't seem like you would do that if you had just murdered him.
I don't know.
I mean, it seems, I guess, most likely, Gordon, that he fell, right?
I mean, it's, or that he, or that he, you know, realizing that he was sort of at the end and that his looting of the,
Daily Mirror's pension fund was going to come to light that he decided to take matters into his own hands.
Yeah, I think those are the more two plausible theories, which have, you know, it's never been resolved which.
One is, you know, he killed himself because he knew the end was coming.
It's, you know, business, his reputation was collapsing and that he was kind of fragile.
I mean, there is also this theory that he might have fallen because, you know, he was massive, overweight.
And supposedly he liked to pee off the back of the boat.
It was something he used to do.
He had the kind of weird things about peeing and toilet habits,
which I don't need to get into.
Was it the opposite of Escobar?
Escobar loved his clean golden toilets.
I think Maxwell was less so from what I can tell.
But, you know, and so one of the theories is he's peeing overboard in the middle of the night,
and he just kind of loses his balance as the boat's swaying and he falls.
So who knows?
I mean, but the reason why this is interesting is, I mean, one,
there's lots of interesting kind of.
connections. I mean, one is the fact that a bit like Jeffrey Epstein, you've got a mysterious death,
which as soon as you have a mysterious death and questions about suicide, it leads to kind of fuels the
conspiracy theories. But I think also it's this link in through Jelaine Maxwell, because Jolene was the
child who was closest to her father, and yet it does seem to have been a pretty abusive relationship,
which he was with pretty much everyone else. I mean, everyone, all his family members,
seem to have been in kind of fear and terror of him. And, you know, he really loved humiliating
people and kind of sadistically crushing them. But she supposedly thought he'd been murdered.
And it is around the time of his death in 1991 that she, you know, Oxford Educator Jelaine
is pitching up in New York and first meets Jeffrey Epstein and soon after begins to date him
and starts to introduce people in her social circle. So there is this interesting connection
through Robert Maxwell into his daughter, Jelaine,
and then into Jeffrey Epstein,
which people have used to make the claim
that this is a Mossad operation running all the way through.
Now, one website says, you know,
the idea is Robert Maxwell somehow groomed almost Jeffrey Epstein
to take on his role.
Now, the problem with that is there's no evidence for it.
So, I mean, there's lots of reasons it doesn't work.
I mean, one is Robert Maxwell's relationship with Mossad is not quite, as it suggested in that.
And secondly, there is no evidence about the kind of grooming and the onward relationship.
It just doesn't feel right to me.
But we can say, despite all of the sort of wild conspiracy theories around his death and things like that,
but Robert Maxwell did have a relationship with Mossad.
It's an ad hoc, probably off and on relationship.
insofar as we can tell from the available evidence.
But he was in contact with Mossad and was a sometime sort of contact and source of information
for Israel's Foreign Intelligence Service, right?
But that feels like a fairly sober take on this story.
Would you agree with that?
Yeah, I would.
So, David, that is the kind of theory, I think, one of the elements of the kind of conspiracy
theories, or the theories, if you want to put it in those terms, about Jeffrey Epstein and
the intelligence world, is that it runs through Robert Maxwell, Jelay Maxwell and Mossad into
Jeffrey Epstein. So maybe there, should we take a break? And afterwards, we'll look at how
far that stacks up. And what else there might be to either suggest that Jeffrey Epstein
did or didn't have some kind of relationship with the spy world.
Hello, it's Gordon here from The Rest is Classified.
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Well, welcome back.
looking in this episode at the very interesting connections, very interesting life and death
of Robert Maxwell, father of Jolade Maxwell, and in particular his connections to the Israeli Mossad.
And I guess Gordon, after looking at this, I mean, what do you, how does it stack up?
What's your tape on the connection?
I mean, first off, I guess there's what was Robert Maxwell's relationship?
with Mossad. And I guess there's the second one, which is really integral to a lot of the
sort of Epstein as spy theories is somehow that Robert Maxwell groomed or brought up Epstein
to also work with or for Mossad. Yeah. I mean, on the first one, I mean, Robert Maxwell
doesn't look like a Mossad agent, but he looks like the kind of person who was a kind of contact,
who's working in this kind of, you know, as he was with Britain, it looks like in the early Cold War.
doing business deals, doing other things, and, you know, has contacts in the spy world,
which is different from, if you like, being run as an operation as an agent in that way.
And it certainly doesn't mean that his daughter was, and it certainly doesn't lead over to the fact that Jeffrey Epstein does.
You know, there's kind of quite a few hops you have to make to make that claim.
And you could see why people might make it, but there's not evidence to support those moves,
those kind of links in the chain.
there isn't the evidence that, you know, Jolay Maxwell was a kind of contact of Mossad.
And I mean, actually in a conversation with the Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche,
transcripts of which were released recently, you know, Jolay Maxwell has actually asked about this,
about her and Epstein's alleged intelligence ties.
And she's asked, you know, have you ever had contact with a Mossad agent?
And she replies, well, not deliberately.
Pardon me?
The question asked, and she repeats, not deliberately, which is kind of an obvious answer, isn't it?
It's like, not knowingly, you know, no, I mean, I might have done without knowing it.
And then, you know, she's asked, actually, do you ever, did you ever think that Mr. Epstein was getting any money from any intelligence agency, including Massard? And she said, I don't believe so. But I wouldn't know. I mean, I would be very surprised if he did. I don't think so, no. So I think certainly not proven this kind of idea of the kind of grooming through Mossade, Robert Maxwell, Jelaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein. I think, you know, there just isn't there the evidence to support that. And it does feel, I don't know what you think, but Robert Maxwell was more of that kind of fluid contact, broker.
fixer figure who had ties into the intelligence world. And I guess that also feels a bit like
Jeffrey Epstein, doesn't it? So there is a parallel there in a sense, isn't there?
Well, and, you know, Epstein does have contacts and links, you know, similar to Robert
Maxwell to Israeli officials and former officials. And one of the most well-documented ties
links Epstein to Ehud Barak, who served as the Prime Minister of Israel from 1999 to 2001.
Later, he was the defense minister, we should say, up front.
Barack has acknowledged his relationship with Epstein and told the Wall Street Journal that over years of meeting with Epstein at his various mansions,
he, quote, never participated in any party or any other inappropriate event with him and had never met him with girls or minors, not even with adult women in the context of any inappropriate
behavior. Barak has said he first met Epstein in 2003 at an event attended by American dignitaries
that was set up through the late Israeli president and statesman Shibon Perez. So again,
business partners basically. Yeah, business partners. And I think as we've seen for some of Ehud
Barack's leaked emails, you know, they were friends. And the two of them have this kind of
longstanding personal and business relationship.
They meet dozens of times between 2013 and 2017 in New York and elsewhere.
And these leaked emails, Ehud Barak's emails, show the two men coordinating on business
proposals, setting up meetings, talking strategy.
Ehud Barak is, he's a frequent guest at that residence.
He receives millions in investment from Epstein linked entities.
Again, this does not have anything to do with Epstein's criminal behavior.
This is Epstein supporting and investing in companies that Ehud Barak was sort of involved with.
Financial records show Epstein brokery meetings between Israeli security startups, things like that.
So again, you can kind of see how this feels maybe spy adjacent.
intelligence, business adjacent.
Well, look, we are talking about a former official, we should say.
Ehou Barak is a former official.
So it's slightly different from direct ties with current officials, it's worth saying.
But certainly, it's people moving in the worlds of kind of business and security.
That's what we're saying.
Yes, exactly.
And there's some interesting, I guess, facets to the relationship between Barack and Epstein
that have come out in the sort of.
of tranche of email traffic that has bedbade public.
And it's a very interesting mix of things, again, that are, I would say, fit much more
under this category of Epstein being a kind of fixer as opposed to working, you know,
formerly for any intelligence service.
So it looks like Epstein was actually involved in helping relocate planes that had been
used to ship arms during Iran-Contra.
And he would help to sort of facilitate the movement of those planes to Ohio.
where they were then repurposed to be used as part of Les Wexner's retail supply chain.
So maybe they were shipping lingerie for a secret or something like that.
Bizarre.
He was involved in helping to, you know, broker makes it, I actually think after having looked at these emails and the reporting on this.
And I would just say that the reporting on this that's been done so far has been done by a group at DropSight News.
that has published the analysis of these documents and many of the documents.
And we should say that these are emails which were hacked and leaked.
It's thought potentially by the Iranians, aren't they?
In some of these cases, though, the easy way to describe what he's doing is, for example,
there's a pretty significant natural gas deal that's been struck between Israel and Egypt,
where the Israelis are going to actually ship natural gas in this field off of Haifa through,
through Egypt. And it would be easy to say that Epstein, looking at the emails, oh, is he helping
to broker this deal? Well, not really. He's kind of involved in helping to set up, there's obviously
there's like a decade of negotiations and back and forth meetings between a huge number of, you know,
Israeli officials, Egyptians, bankers. And Epstein is kind of involved in little bits and pieces
along the way, helping to arrange meetings and offer advice to Ehud Barak.
So he's involved in this kind of political sphere, security sphere, but very much in the background
and very much as a kind of informal advisor and fixer for Ahud Barak.
again, in this kind of social broker making connections vibe, you know, he tries to help Ehud Barak establish a back channel to Russian officials during the Syrian Civil War with the idea that that might help enable the Russians to convince Assad to step down.
Of course, nothing came of it, but Epstein was kind of helping Barack get meetings set up by leveraging some of Epstein's contacts in Russia.
So again, this kind of role as a fixer that he's playing for Barack.
So he's kind of using this network.
Again, it's very Robert Maxwell-esque, I guess in some ways,
is he's kind of using his huge Rolodex to make connections and to bridge networks,
which is, you know, a valuable thing for Ehud Barak or potentially in theory for a spy
service.
Yeah, but if we go back to our kind of central question, does it prove you
working for a spy service?
I think the answer is it doesn't prove it.
No.
Because, A, you know, a relationship with an Israeli former minister official is not the
same as a relationship with Mossad.
And also this kind of work, as you said, is brokering, fixing in that kind of slightly
murky world where security business collide internationally.
But it isn't spy work, is it?
I think that's worth saying, you know, it doesn't kind of.
of support that idea that he was certainly an intelligence asset. But it does give us an insight
into the kind of the circles he moved in and the contacts he had and what he was able to do with
his kind of roll-a-decks of contacts, which I think is interesting. So was Jeffrey Epstein working
with or for an intelligence service? I mean, I don't think we provided any proof that he has,
even though there's some kind of interesting conjecture about where he might have been of value or what he might have done.
More in certain areas certainly than others, though.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I think we both probably violently agree, Gordon.
It's very unlikely that Epstein's was using the sort of sex trafficking ring as a big blackmail operation.
For an intelligence service, yeah, as opposed to on his own behalf.
Yeah.
Sure.
Yeah.
Sure. And, you know, it's interesting when I, when I spoke with a lot of these, you know, former CIA officers over the past few days as we've been putting this together, there was unanimous agreement that that very click-baited, salacious piece of the theory is extremely unlikely.
The other type of sort of source is someone who's collecting what we'd call FI or foreign intelligence. You know, think, you know, the series we did last year on Adolf,
Tolkachev, the billion dollar spy. He's a Soviet, you know, engineer working at the heart of the
military industrial establishment in the mid-1980s. He is passing the agency plans for avionic systems
and Soviet fighter planes. He's got access to FI. He's got state secrets, right? He's got access to
secrets. Yeah. Right. Exactly. I mean, you know, we did the Venezuela episodes. This CIA source,
the source the agency seems to have had that was very close to Maduro and was passing information on his pattern of life, that is not the sort of information that Epstein would have had. I mean, he might have had little bits and pieces of stuff. Yeah. Right. But he's, he doesn't really have ongoing access to sensitive state secrets. But there are types of contacts and sources beyond FI producers.
And I think this is where, again, in theory, Epstein could make more sense.
I mean, there's people that are called social brokers, right?
So it's someone who agrees to create a scenario where an introduction looks casual.
So, for example, you know, something that the agency might do, let's say in Hollywood,
would be to develop a relationship with a big Hollywood producer, director, actor,
and when they throw a party to get the right people invited
so that a contact could be made between the agency
and a potential target for foreign intelligence, right?
So there's social brokers, they're assessment collectors,
so people who collect information on targets
and help assess them for development or recruitment, right?
So this could be someone who has access to huge networks
of other humans and can say, okay, who's having an affair, who's secretly gay, so that an eventual
case officer, when they're making their approach or target, can sort of understand where the cracks
in that person might be that they could exploit. Yeah, and I mean, I think back some of the
other kind of people, you know, in history you've done that, who had a social network through
which they could pass gossip. When you think about the Cambridge spies and Guy Burgess, we'll be,
I think, you know, talking about him soon on the podcast. But also, you know, I remember the
story we did very early on about Anna Chapman, who was,
moving in elite circles in Manhattan on behalf of the SVR, the Russian intelligence service,
you know, until she was picked up in 2010. Now, she didn't have access to secrets,
but she did have access to a lot of interesting people on the kind of high-end elite party scene
in Manhattan. And I think we both agreed that had its value for Russian intelligence to
collect details on people, to know who's up, who's down, you know, what the gossip is.
There is a value to that for intelligence agencies, which is different, as you said, from kind of
state secret stuff. Yeah. And the other one, and I love this term, is a deep pockets guy,
which is how these former case officers will refer to it. It's a deep pockets guy, right?
It's an access agent with deep pockets. And you should say an access agent is someone who
provides access to something else, to a facility, to a place or to something else, yeah,
rather than the intelligence themselves. Yeah. And a lot of times these deep pockets guys would be,
you know, a rich person who's bored and who, you know, wants to do something that to them feels
more meaningful, right, than just making money. And so in this case, it could be, we've got some
equipment. We need moved across a border or from point A to point B. Could you help us?
Could you loan us a boat or a plane? You know, Epstein had both of those. They could move money.
They could hide money. Epstein was also good at those things. Could you buy a building somewhere?
our government would have a hard time buying a building in denied country. A, could you help us do that?
Interestingly, you know, if they have access to an organization, family office, you know, could you provide cover to some of our intelligence officers or Knox through that, that organization or family office?
Could you help link these kind of two networks that you know that you can connect that we want connected to enable this kind of operation?
Right. So Epstein's a spy.
Well, it's like, okay, that's not a helpful tagline because it ignores the different ways in which someone could actually work with or for an intelligence service.
But having kind of laid that out, you know, I think what does seem substantiated, as we get to the end of our two-episode exploration of this question about whether Epstein was working with
for an intelligence service.
What seems substantiated is that Epstein used his network, some of which did rub kind of,
you know, up close to the intelligence world.
They're kind of spy or intelligence adjacent, as we've said.
He used those networks to promote the financial interest that he and his friends had.
Yeah.
And that there was probably an overlap in some of these cases between his own financial interests,
the interests of his friends, and Israeli security.
But it looks like he was probably kind of a social broker in deep pockets guy for Ehud Barak, right, from these e-bails at least.
While operating in that sphere, he might have bumped into intelligence officers.
But again, there aren't facts out there to substantiate any kind of relationship between Jeffrey.
Epstein and Mossad or another intelligence service. I think that's where I've come down at the
end of this. Yeah. And I mean, I think it's really useful a way you talk about, it's not as
simple as being an agent or not or a spy or not. There are lots of people who kind of bump alongside
the intelligence world and occasionally have contacts in the intelligence world and whom the
intelligence world might be interested in and want to know what they're doing. But that is
slightly different from actually being, A, a spy, or B, being tasked by or working for that
intelligence service. I mean, I've come across murky characters in my time, believe it or not,
David, you know, the kind of world of kind of arms dealers and, you know, people who are in that
world. And, dare I say, certain types of international businessmen who also seek to cultivate
sometimes relationships with intelligence agencies, because they hope it might buy them protection,
access, confidential information, entrances to the right places themselves. And sometimes those
intelligence agencies are also curious what those people are up to. You know, and they can be useful
sources of kind of gossip or information and maybe can be of use for something or other. But it is
slightly different from there being a kind of formal established relationship. And it just
feels to me like Jeffrey Epstein moved in those murky circles, in which, as you said,
he will have bumped into lots of intelligence services. They will have known about stuff about
him. I don't doubt. He would have maybe cultivated contacts with them, maybe in the hope it might
protect him in some way. But that is slightly different from actually saying he's a spy.
Yeah, yeah, exactly. And I think, you know, it's probably worth at the end here just reiterating
kind of going back to the
compromise angle, right?
This really, the frankly, I think conspiracy theory
that is most commonly linked to the Epstein as a spy theory, right?
There's no credible evidence that Mossad had anything to do with that.
CIA would not have touched it with a 10,000-foot pole.
I don't think the Brits would either.
The Brits wouldn't have either, right?
And so what I think is interesting, well, I think it's helpful we've unpacked this, you know, for listeners.
And I hope listeners have found it useful is that what does seem clear, though, is that Epstein was floating in spy adjacent networks and was involved in, you know, fixer work that did have political and security sort of connections to it.
he's just not doing that, at least there's no evidence, that he's doing that kind of work at the behest of or for any intelligence service.
And frankly, the very clean, I think given what we know about Epstein, the very clean sort of lens to use to interpret all of this is the value that he created for himself was leveraging his massive rolodex and his networks.
and he was very driven by, it seems, financial motivations here.
You don't have to layer in an intelligence angle to explain his desire to be a sort of fixer
or social broker for his friends.
That was his life and existence.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, you can see it as him using the connections, yeah, for his financial
support, but more for his pretty dark, predatory and criminal sexual behavior.
and you do wonder how far he was also running almost like a personal intelligence agency
and compromise operation for his own service of his own dark ends rather than doing it
for a formal foreign intelligence service.
And I think that with the video recordings to everything else also seems kind of at least
plausible to me.
And one of the reasons why it is just such a kind of dark and in many ways awful story.
But yeah, I think that's a great place to leave it, isn't it, David?
And I think hopefully we've unpacked some of those questions because they are floating around a lot.
And we do hear people asking this question.
As you said, they've been kind of asking it of us.
What do we think of the Epstein files?
But I'm sure there's more to come out on those files.
I think from what I hear, there's a lot more files which lawyers are looking at.
So who knows what else will come out.
And we'll come back to it if there's anything new or anything that changes that assessment.
But I think that gives an idea.
where we, what we think of it at the moment at least.
Yeah, that's right.
No, and we should say, we'll do more on this if, you know, if events change and it makes
sense to do so.
Next week, we will be starting a very exciting four-part series on someone Gordon who was
actually and very, we've confirmed, was a spy.
And that is Kim Filby.
We're doing four episodes on really the young Kim Filby, who I think we'd probably both agree is Britain's greatest traitor.
Yeah, the man who betrayed MI6 to the Russians, to the KGB, probably did more damage psychologically, you know, as well to Britain than any other spy in its history.
And actually, we've been talking about, you know, Jeffrey Epstein.
I think in a way, Kim Filby is an interesting parallel because it's an example.
of a very patient, very long-term, classic spy operation of the type that the Russians were and are capable of operating,
where you do send someone into the heart of the establishment.
And Kim Filby, along with some of the other Cambridge spies like Gaia Burgess,
were able to kind of move around the British establishment in a kind of Epstein-like way
and do enormous damage because they really were spies working for the KGB.
So I think, you know, it's a chance to kind of explore what that looks like.
and the psychology, I think, of what leads a very young man to make that commitment.
So, yeah, we're starting that four-part series next week.
And, you know, long-time listeners to the podcast will, of course know that Gordon Carrera has an inexplicable fondness for treason.
And so we'll get to experience that over the course of a couple weeks as I systematically dismantle his misconceptions.
and, you know, and bizarre, bizarre obsessions with traders.
So we also have that to look forward to.
And if you want all of that at once just to gorge on it,
as soon as those four episodes drop, do go and join the Declassified Club at the Rest
is Classified.com, where you get early access.
You also get access to bonus content.
We've got some great bonus content coming as part of that Filby series, including a tape
that Gordon Carrera dug out of the Stasi archives, I believe. Isn't that right, Gordon?
Yeah, of Kim Phil will be talking himself about his career. So, yeah, that will be there for
declassified club members. So do you join up? But otherwise, we'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
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