The Tucker Carlson Show - John Kiriakou: CIA’s Secret Torture Programs, MK-Ultra, 9-11, and Jailing Political Opponents

Episode Date: June 4, 2025

John Kiriakou committed Washington’s one unpardonable sin: he embarrassed the CIA. John Brennan tried to have him executed for it. (00:00) Introduction (01:41) Speaking Out Against the CIA’s T...orture Program (07:20) Why the CIA Loved Obama (20:05) Why John Brennan Hated Kiriakou (1:08:34) The Major Issue With the Espionage Act (1:20:20) Kiriakou’s Experience in Prison (1:33:55) Did Any Elected Officials Defend Kiriakou?Paid partnerships with: MeriwetherFarms: Visit https://MeriwetherFarms.com/Tucker and use code TUCKER76 for 15% off your first order. Silencer Central: Promo code Tucker10 for 10% off your purchase of banish suppressors at https://www.silencercentral.com  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Do you think it is possible to get people to commit acts that they wouldn't otherwise commit? I do. MKUltra caused people to jump out of windows and commit suicide. Yeah. You said there were a lot of shrinks at CIA. I used those shrinks on operations. We even hypnotized one guy. He was hypnotized with his arm in the air for two hours.
Starting point is 00:00:22 Would you describe the CIA as an intelligence gathering agency? Not anymore. It used to be until 9-11. And then it became a paramilitary organization. What they would rather do is fancy high-tech satellites and drones. And they're not really in the business anymore of recruiting spies to steal secrets. I got a call from a Japanese diplomat. And he said, hey, let's have
Starting point is 00:00:45 lunch. I said, great. He said to me, so what's next for you? And I said, I think I'm going to resign soon. And he says, no, if you give me information, I can give you money. He was an FBI agent trying to get me to commit actual espionage. The FBI did that to you? Mm-hmm. We got to burn the government down, actually. I mean, your only crime was an ABC interview in which you say, yes, the CIA does have a torture program. I know because I worked there and the president authorized it and lied about it in public.
Starting point is 00:01:18 That's your sum total of your crimes. That was it. It's pretty unbelievable you went to jail. I think when 9-11 happened, you were one of how many CIA officers at the Counterterrorism Center who spoke Arabic? Oh, at the Counterterrorism Center? Two? Two. So you have this distinguished CIA career. No one outside the CIA has heard of you, but in the CIA, you're very well known. Helped capture an Al-Qaeda operative in Pakistan, risked your life as an operations officer. And then you leave CIA and you mention in an ABC News interview in 2007 that the CIA is torturing people, which it was. Yes. Illegally. Yes. And is a stain on the country, didn't make the country safer. You say that and you wind up in jail.
Starting point is 00:02:34 I sure did. Did any of the people who were torturing other people wind up in jail? Not a single one. The torturers. I'm sorry, it's so crazy. It's nuts. It's nuts. The torturers didn't go to jail. The people who conceived of the torture, the people who funded the torture, appropriated taxpayer money for the torture, the people who implemented it. Nobody went to prison but me. And what's I guess what's so funny is when you think of whistleblowers complaining about something like torture, you think of like, I don't know, some, you know, the Barragans or some, you know, professional peace activists. Right. You were like a.
Starting point is 00:03:10 I was a true believer. You were a CIA operations officer. Yes. Like doing the war on terror. Specifically a counterterrorism operations officer. Yes. And so you were hardly some like. No, I was no bleeding heart.
Starting point is 00:03:24 Peace now type. Right. No. And you went were hardly some like- No, I was no bleeding heart. Peace now type, right. No. And you went to jail. Amazing. So can you just, just to come to the point of the story where you're out of the CIA, you're working at Deloitte. Yes. And you give this interview to Brian Ross at ABC.
Starting point is 00:03:41 Right. One of the few, I think, pretty honest ABC reporters who, of course, left ABC. Agreed. Too much honesty for them. And what happened then? That was 2007, during the Bush administration. Right. It was in December of 2007. So, I went on this interview with Brian Ross and I said three things. I said that the CIA was torturing its prisoners. I said that torture was official U.S. government policy. And I said that because President Bush had specifically said, we do not torture. I knew that wasn't true. Where did he say that? He said that in a press conference at the White House in December of 2007.
Starting point is 00:04:16 And I said that the torture had been personally approved by the president, which was also true. And so within 24 hours, the CIA... How did you know that, by the way? Oh, because I was... Were you just guessing? Oh, no. I was the executive assistant to the CIA's deputy director for operations. So I was intimately involved in the planning for all of this nonsense, not just torture, but the Iraq war as well. And I was watching the rule of law just be thrown to
Starting point is 00:04:48 the dogs almost on a daily basis and I decided whatever Brian Ross was going to ask me I was going to tell the truth that's what I did um so that was in late 2007 late 2007 December of 2007 so the president president authorized this. Again, didn't make the country any safer. No. The whole thing really hurt the country. And then lied about it in public, which you're not supposed to do. I mean, you're not supposed to do that.
Starting point is 00:05:16 No. You're just not supposed to. You said those three things, which are factually true. Yes. Yes. And then what happened? Well, the FBI began investigating me the next day. And they investigated me for a full year from December of 07 to December of 08.
Starting point is 00:05:30 Did they tell you they were investigating you? No, I read about it in CNN. So how were they investigating you? You know, I don't know. They never sought to interview me. I ran out and I hired an attorney. And we leaked that to the press that, oh, I'm represented by this legal giant in Washington, D.C. It was I really don't know what constituted an FBI investigation. But a year later in 2008, they dropped the case and they said that I had not committed a crime. But when they investigate you, what is that? Do you have any sense of what that
Starting point is 00:06:16 means? In the subsequent investigation, which we can get to, it was very clear what it meant. But in that year, I think what they did, and I'm speculating here, is that they went over the ABC News interview and a subsequent interview I did with the New York Times. They parsed it and they decided that I had not committed a crime. Now, in the declination letter that they sent to my attorney declining to prosecute me, they said that it was illegal to classify a program if the program is illegal wait can i see is it a federal crime to say the president is lying no oh it's not oh so you're allowed in the united states you're allowed if you see a politician lying you can say that person's lying call them on it okay that's okay
Starting point is 00:07:02 just because it is amer after all. Right. Just want to make sure. Okay. So the FBI spends a year investigating you because you say the president is lying. Yes. Totally normal. And you don't know that they're investigating you because they never contacted you or your lawyer. Never contacted either one of us. So then 2008 rolls around. Bush leaves after two terms, Obama gets elected. Yes. And he's very much the peace candidate. He's for transparency. Well, I like to say that it was Saint Obama that came down from the heavens into the White House to save us. Black Jesus returns. That's right. But he's very much, I mean, I remember, in fact, being on television saying, you know, he was this wild-eyed peacenik lefty guy.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Oh, no, he wasn't. Oh, he wasn't. You know, this is something that I've puzzled over for a long time. And I've come to the conclusion that the CIA, at the top levels of the CIA, they really love it when a new president is elected and he has no background in intelligence or foreign policy. Usually, Donald Trump is a very unique figure in this scenario. Very unusual. But Barack Obama, two years as a senator, two years as a senator, no experience in foreign policy, no experience in intelligence. The day after an election, the director of the CIA authorizes a president-elect to begin receiving a PDB, a president's daily brief. And so the day after the election, they go with this 16-page document
Starting point is 00:08:39 marked at six levels above top secret. And they say, Mr. President-elect, wait till you see the cool things we're doing all around the world. And they've sucked him in. They made him one of the guys. And every day they're like, wait till you see the update on what we told you yesterday. It's incredible. And then we get the feedback at the CIA. Oh, the president loved this. The president had a follow-up question on that. Oh, the president said, oh my God, when he read this. Well, that's not what Obama- It almost sounds like you're psychologically profiling the president. Oh, I think that's exactly what they do.
Starting point is 00:09:13 And don't forget, they have an entire staff of psychiatrists and psychologists that do exactly that. And so they use the tools that they have employed for decades to subvert foreign governments to subvert their own government? Yes. But they smile while they're doing it. And they say, no, no, we're just trying to forge a good working relationship with the president. In fact, for a while in the 90s, they didn't even call him the president. They called him the first customer. Come on.
Starting point is 00:09:42 I swear to God. I know we're getting far afield and we will get back to your story, but it doesn't sound like, so if you look at the org chart, the president controls CIA. Yes. But you're describing a situation where CIA kind of controls the president. You know, this is another problem. It's that presidents come and go every four years, every eight years. But these CIA people, they're there for 25, 30, 35 years. They don't go anywhere. And so if they don't like a president or if a president orders them to do something that they don't want to do, they just wait because they know they can wait him out and then he's not going to be president anymore. And they can continue on with whatever plan the blob or the deep state wants to implement.
Starting point is 00:10:32 You know, Donald Trump took a lot of guff in his first term when he used on a regular basis, the term deep state. And I argued from the very beginning, it is a deep state. Maybe you don't like the terminology. You don't have to call it the deep state. You can call it the federal bureaucracy. You can call it the instrument of the population through which they control their government are perennial. They come and go. But the people who carry out those orders remain. So over time, they're the ones with the power, right? And then when they get caught, they scramble. I remember Jane Harmon.
Starting point is 00:11:17 She was a congresswoman from Venice, California. She was the chairwoman of the House Intelligence Committee during the Iraq War. And she was briefed on the torture program. Well, when I went public on the torture program, reporters had questions. Well, did Congress approve this? Of course, Congress approved it. And Congress appropriated money for it. So, she's the chairman. And reporters went to her and said, hey, what about this torture program? And she said, I didn't know anything about the torture program.
Starting point is 00:11:49 She's a liar. She was lying. And I said, and I remember saying it to the New York Times, I said, she was in the room when it was briefed. And when she was challenged, she said, oh yeah, I remember that day. But you know what? I got up and I left early
Starting point is 00:12:04 and I left one of my aides as a note taker and he never briefed me, which is also a lie. Yeah. Well, she was just a pure tool of the intel agency. That was it. And of foreign government. And that's an ongoing problem on Capitol Hill is rather than being overseers, they're cheerleaders for the intelligence. So how, that is absolutely true. And I've known them all. And, you know, if you criticize any of the intel agencies, particularly CIA, which is the most powerful,
Starting point is 00:12:30 they're immediately defensive about it. You know, like it's their job to defend these agencies when in fact their job, as you said, is to oversee these agencies and to keep them within the boundaries of the constitution. How does that happen?
Starting point is 00:12:47 You know, I say all the time that we really did have real oversight for a while from the 70s into the 1980s, a decade, a decade and a half, where people really did exert influence over intelligence policy by really examining some of these covert action programs. But Pat Moynihan is dead and Barry Goldwater's dead and all these other senators and congressmen,
Starting point is 00:13:16 Otis Pike, they're all gone. They're all dead. And now we've got people who just egg on the intelligence communities. And I'll give you an example. When I got out of prison, I was invited to a dinner at the Greek ambassador's residence. And I went and there was a senator there, a democratic senator there, and he said, hey, welcome home. We were really worried about you, and I said, oh, thank you. I said, Senator, I've got to tell you, I was disappointed that you didn't say anything. You didn't express any support or anything related to my case, and he got very angry, and he said, listen, it took everything I had just to not lose my security clearance, and I said, so you're afraid of them. That's what this is. And he walked away. That's disgusting. That's disgusting. But I think you can go through, certainly in the Senate, you can go through the roster of the, you know, the hundred members of
Starting point is 00:14:21 the Senate and then compare it to the list of the permanent, you know, the hundred members of the Senate and then compare it to the list of the permanent, you know, the Committee on Intelligence. And those are the worst, those are the most dishonest people. Yeah, they are. Yeah. They are. The most rotten, the most morally compromised,
Starting point is 00:14:35 the most dishonest by far. I have to agree. That was my experience. How does that happen? Like sitting on the Senate Intel Committee is like just a sign that, you know, you're one of the in crowd. Worse than that. Like you're not someone I would invite to dinner at my house. No, I agree. How? How do they identify the most morally compromised people. I wonder if this began with 9-11. I think that it didn't.
Starting point is 00:15:09 I think it began earlier than that, like during the Clinton administration, where everybody just, where the intelligence community was seen as a force for good, which was odd to me. Well, I mean, that's how I grew up thinking that. Where the intelligence community was seen as a force for good. Yes. Which was odd to me. Well, I mean, that's how I grew up thinking that, for sure. I mean, it was not even questioned.
Starting point is 00:15:32 When I first joined the agency, they were still sort of getting over the whole church committee era. And then when Bill Clinton was elected president in 1992, we were told that there were going to be big changes at the agency. And indeed, one of the things that Clinton did was he ordered what they called a cull. So we had to go through the files of literally every recruited agent in the CIA. And if they had any human rights problem, they were fired, right? We just cut off contact with them. And I remember thinking, wow, they're actually serious about this. I'm very pleasantly surprised. But then 9-11 happened. And not only did that go out the window, the pendulum swung so far to the other side that it has yet to go back to its point of equilibrium. And then just naturally, inevitably, predictably, the tactics that that and other agencies used against foreign governments
Starting point is 00:16:30 were used against the U.S. government, the elected government, and the population of the country. I know you and I agree on this. We've talked about this in the past, but the CIA is forbidden by law from spying on American citizens, as is NSA. It's a part of NSA's charter that it may not collect the communications
Starting point is 00:16:50 of American citizens or U.S. persons. NSA spied on me and leaked the information to the New York Times. And leaked the information. I remember it very well. To control me. Right, oh, it's illegal. Guess what happened?
Starting point is 00:17:02 Nothing. And here again, Congress just says, well, what are we going to do? Yeah, we're afraid of them too. So here's a company we're always excited to advertise because we actually use their products every day. It's Merriweather Farms. Remember when everybody knew their neighborhood butcher? You look back and you feel like, oh, there was something really important about that, knowing the person who cut your meat. And at some point, your grandparents knew the people who raised their meat so they could trust what they ate. But that time is long
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Starting point is 00:19:27 because your real crime was calling the president a liar, George W. Bush, you had to have thought that once he was gone, it was going to be forgotten because what you said was true. That's right. And when my attorneys received this declination letter, my wife and I actually went out and celebrated that night. We went out and had dinner. I had no idea that three weeks later when Barack Obama became president, that that's when my trouble was really going to start. Obama initially named John Brennan as the CIA director. Liberals were up in arms at the time. And so that nomination was withdrawn, you may recall, and he named Brennan instead the Deputy National Security Advisor for Counterterrorism. John Brennan and I always hated each other. I don't know why he hated me. I hated him for what a very dark figure, very dangerous, willing to take risks that no one should take without appropriate congressional oversight. And frankly, I said this on your show one time,
Starting point is 00:20:33 and I don't mean to sound like that guy, but I thought he was in over his head intellectually in that position. He was not cut out for that position. When did you meet him? I met him in 1990, January of 1990. Over 35 years ago. Yes. Okay. So it's fair to say you- Oh, I knew him very, very well. In fact, when I was the executive assistant to the deputy director
Starting point is 00:20:58 for operations, John was the, he first, he was the deputy executive director and then executive director of the CIA. So, he was the number three officer in the CIA while I was the assistant to the number four officer in the CIA. So, I briefed him every single morning and we just did not like or respect one another. Why didn't you like or respect him? First of all, I thought he was unqualified, number one. John made a life in analysis, but he struck up a very close friendship with George Tenet when George was at the National Security Council during the Clinton administration. George became the deputy CIA director and then CIA director. And every time George got promoted, he promoted Brennan.
Starting point is 00:21:44 But he promoted him into jobs that he simply wasn't qualified for. Like the station chief in Riyadh. This is a guy that had been an analyst for 20-something years. And you're going to make him the station chief? Not only has he never recruited an agent, he's never even met one. And that's who you want in charge of operations? In Riyadh? In Riyadh. one of the most important places in the complicated place very complicated and then when he went back he named him the deputy uh uh executive director so he's running the day-to-day operations of the entire cia the whole thing it just didn't make sense to me. So you thought that he was unqualified, but it sounds like you thought that he was morally unqualified also.
Starting point is 00:22:29 Oh, I always believed he was morally unqualified. John had a reputation as being vindictive. He had once worked for a woman who didn't like or respect him, And she let him go. He got a job briefing George Tenet at the National Security Council. And then when George was promoted, he promoted John to the point where he called this woman in and he fired her. Like, was that really necessary? You could take the high road. There's no reason to be that guy that you just go in and start, you know, trashing your enemies. But that's what he did. And there was a group of guys that came of age with him. And he all promoted all of them with himself, with his rising boat. They all went to the top. And I'll tell you too, I was in operations at the time working for people who had spent 30 years in operations and they disliked him with a special kind of passion. And it was because they didn't respect him either. It was clear. Interesting. You said he was dangerous?
Starting point is 00:23:43 I always thought that he was dangerous why yeah that's a strong thing to say about somebody yeah you know i'm gonna get on my soapbox again so forgive me but we're a nation of laws right we're a nation of laws and whether you like the law or you don't like the law you have to respect it or you work to change it. You can't just pretend that the law doesn't exist. Oh, we're the good guys. So let's talk about the torture program for a second. Here he is the number three in the CIA and the leadership wants to implement a torture program. Okay, we've got this thing called the Federal Torture Act of 1946 that says you can't do that. In 1946, we executed Japanese soldiers who had waterboarded American POWs. We executed, that was a death penalty offense to waterboard somebody. In January of 1968,
Starting point is 00:24:39 the Washington Post ran a front page photograph of an American soldier waterboarding a North Vietnamese prisoner. The day that that picture was published, the Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, ordered an investigation. That soldier was arrested. He was convicted of torture and sentenced to 20 years at Leavenworth. But then in 2002, like magic, it's all legal.
Starting point is 00:25:05 So waterboarding has been around a long time. So waterboarding has been around a long time. Oh, it's been around a long time. The Chinese actually invented waterboarding in like the 15th century. Can you explain waterboarding for a moment? Sure. So a prisoner is strapped to a board with his feet elevated compared to his head. There's something put in his mouth, like material, a cloth, burlap, whatever.
Starting point is 00:25:30 And then water is poured on his face. So it's supposed to give you the feeling that you're drowning. In fact, in many cases, you are drowning because a lot of water is getting past that cloth. In the case of Abu Zubaydah, and we can talk about him later if you want, we drowned him. His heart stopped beating and he had to be revived so that he could be tortured more. That's what waterboarding is. Why is it done?
Starting point is 00:25:58 The idea is, this is a term that the CIA came up with. The idea is to instill the feeling of learned helplessness in the prisoner so that the prisoner is so terrified of you, so terrified of what you can do to him, that he'll whimper as soon as you walk into the room and just confess everything that you want him to confess to. But the problem is that torture just simply doesn't work. This is a proven fact that decades of scientists and psychologists and psychiatrists have proven it doesn't work. And so, the prisoner will tell you what he thinks you want to know just to get you to stop torturing him. You know, we know from prisoners held in North Vietnamese prisons, American prisoners, that when asked, well, who was on your ship? What were the names of the men on your ship? They would recite like, you know, the Pittsburgh Steelers offensive line from 1968, or just make up names or childhood friends just to get them to stop torturing. So it just doesn't work. So what was the process post 9-11 for waterboarding?
Starting point is 00:27:11 I mean, I noticed that in the later reports, some of these guys were waterboarded, KSM, for example. 187 times. 187 times. So was he coming up with the offensive line of the Pittsburgh Steelers every time? Like, why would they keep doing that? Well, they were convinced that he knew the location of Osama bin Laden and that he knew what the plans were for the next attack on the United States. Well, there were no plans for the next attack. Sometimes there would be, you know, 10 or 12 guys sitting around a
Starting point is 00:27:45 campfire in Afghanistan saying, you know, we should do, we should attack, you know, we should attack the Chicago stock exchange. Oh yeah, that's what we should do. Okay. That's, that's not an, that's not a plot. That's just some guy at a campfire, just throwing it out there. So they were convinced that there was another plot planned, and they wanted to get it. But 187 times. And KSM ended up confessing to the Daniel Pearl murder, which we know for a fact he wasn't even in Pakistan when Daniel Pearl was murdered. He confessed to it? He confessed to it. And then when they showed him the video showing that it wasn't his arm that was sawing off daniel
Starting point is 00:28:25 pearl's head he's like no look look at the hair on that arm my arms that hairy that's my arm no you didn't kill daniel pearl stop saying a lot of hairy people in the region exactly yeah um but 187 times and abu zubaydah 83 times they waterboard him 83 times it was worse than that you know there's this conventional wisdom that waterboarding was the worst. It was sort of the top of the list of torture techniques. There were worse techniques. We killed people with other techniques. For example, the cold cell. So you're stripped naked, you're chained to an eye bolt in the ceiling, so you can't sit or kneel or lay or get comfortable in any way.
Starting point is 00:29:08 Your cell is chilled to 50 degrees Fahrenheit. And then every hour, a CIA officer goes into your cell and throws a bucket of ice water on you. And people died of hypothermia. The Justice Department didn't say we could murder people. They said we could use these different techniques. They didn't say we could use these different techniques. They didn't say we could use this cold cell. That was just made up. And people died? There was another one, well, sleep deprivation. The American Psychological Association, the APA,
Starting point is 00:29:35 has published studies saying that people begin to lose their minds at day seven with no sleep. They begin to die at day nine. Their organs begin to shut down. But the CIA was authorized to keep people awake for 12 days. And people just drop dead as they're being kept awake. With that eye bolt in the ceiling again and strong lights and hard rock, you know, death metal music 24 hours a day on a loop. You go crazy and then your organs just don't work. Do we have any idea how many people died under torture?
Starting point is 00:30:11 The CIA has never said. It was in the Senate torture report, but it was redacted. So we don't know the number. What's your sense? At least a half a dozen. Were tortured to death? Yeah, to death. We're always looking for cool companies that make products that make you feel better,
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Starting point is 00:33:18 You feel light and energetic. It's the kind of snack your grandparents ate. Worth bringing back. So you can go to masachips.com, Masa's M-A-S-A, by the way, mossachips.com slash Tucker to start snacking. Get 25% off. We enjoy them. You will too. Do you think, obviously, you're very much part of this story. You went to prison because of it. So it's kind of hard to, you know, you have an interest in this. Sure.
Starting point is 00:33:41 But as objectively as you can, do you think there was a lot of useful information produced by all this torture? No, not by the torture. Listen, it's like a kick in my gut to have to compliment the FBI. It really is. You know, when I've had 22 FBI agents raiding my house and taking all my stuff. But if there's one thing that the FBI is really good at, it's interrogations. And they proved it with Abu Zubaydah. They proved that if you treat a prisoner with respect and engage in rapport building and take some time to build this relationship, the prisoner will tell you everything that you want to know. And that's what happened with Abu Zubaydah. But every time the CIA would step in and begin torturing him,
Starting point is 00:34:29 he would clam up, like completely clam up. And then the FBI would have to go back in, try to reverse the damage and start the whole thing over again. So you gave that interview at the end of 2007 in which you said really just it was pretty spare interview it was you didn't go into any detail no investigation happens it's dropped obama gets elected a month later john brennan i interrupted you i had no idea idea that John Brennan asked Eric Holder to secretly reopen the case against me. Why do you think he did that? Of all the problems that were going on in the world. No other problems in the world, right.
Starting point is 00:35:14 I think for two reasons. Number one, he genuinely disliked me. And he has this history of going after people using lawfare, which now we all know what that means, using lawfare to take down his enemies. Number one. Lawfare understates it. Violence. I mean, they came to your house. They cuffed you.
Starting point is 00:35:36 They threw you in a cell. Oh, yeah. Like those are acts of violence, physical force. Very much so. Right. That's right. So if you'll do that, if you'll take a man from his five children and lock him in a cell
Starting point is 00:35:48 for years. And they fired my wife just because she was married to me. She was a senior CIA officer. Okay. So you've answered the question how is John Brennan a dangerous man? So he goes to the then Attorney General Eric Holder and says, we need to
Starting point is 00:36:04 reopen. Of all the problems that we've got, we need to make sure John Kirikou goes to jail. Yeah. We received 15,000 pages of classified discovery in my case, but we found in that discovery three memos. There was a memo from John Brennan to Eric Holder saying, charge him with espionage. Espionage? Espionage, which can be a death penalty charge, I might add. Who are you spying for? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:36:31 Who? Well, did they allege you were spying for somebody? No. What they said is that I told the media that the CIA had a torture program. And so because the media published it, our enemies knew that we had this top secret program. But how is that esp had this top secret program. But how is that espionage? I know, it's not.
Starting point is 00:36:49 So Holder writes back and says, my people don't think he committed espionage. Sure. And then Brennan wrote back and said, charge him anyway and make him defend himself. Try not to use the F word. This is my new thing, self-improvement journey I'm taking. But it's making me mad hearing this because, I mean, you were in, I happened to be in Pakistan around the time you were,
Starting point is 00:37:11 very dangerous country. I wasn't even doing anything dangerous. Oh, no, it was super dangerous, most dangerous place I've ever been. On earth at the time. Yes. Yeah. And so, it's not an overstatement to say you're risking your life, father of all these kids, to fight the war on terror against the Islamic terrorists. And now they're accusing you of aiding those terrorists? Aiding the enemy. It gets worse. That's really over the top. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:35 I don't think I've ever told you this story. But when I was on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, I was the senior investigator. And so one of the great things about that job is you get to have lunch with diplomats from around the world and just talk about the issues. You were working for CIA at the time? No, I was working for John Kerry. Yep. When he was the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. When was this? 2009 to 2011.
Starting point is 00:38:01 Yes. So I got a call from a Japanese diplomat and he said, hey, let's have lunch. I said, great. So, we meet at a restaurant on Capitol Hill. His English was so bad that we had to do the lunches in Arabic, right? He was an Arabist and I'm an Arabist. And so, we would have our lunches in Arabic. And I remember what we talked about in that first meeting. I know it's absurd, isn't it? You and the Japanese guy speaking Arabic. I'm surprised somebody didn't call the cops. So, we talked about the Israeli election, the Turkish election. We talked about the peace process. I remember it very clearly. And at the end of it, he said to me, so what's
Starting point is 00:38:42 next for you? And I said, I think I'm going to resign soon. I promised Senator Kerry that I would give him two years. It's been two and a half and I have five kids that I need to put through college. And he says, no, don't do that. If you give me information, I can give you money. And I said, what in the world is wrong with you? Do you have any idea how many times I've made that pitch? Shame on you for cold pitching me. And I indignantly got up and walked out and I went directly without stopping to the office of the Senate security officer. And I said,
Starting point is 00:39:20 I was just pitched by a foreign intelligence officer. I need to report it. He said, was it that damn Russian again? And I said, no, it was Japanese. He said, Japanese? Well, occasionally they're poking around looking for trade secrets. So he said, sit at this standalone computer, write it up and I'll send it to the FBI. I said, fine. I wrote the entire thing as a memo. He sent it to the FBI. The next day he calls me and says, two FBI agents are going to come up. They want to interview you. I said, great. I go back down to the security vault and these two young FBI agents come. I tell them the story again. And they said, okay, here's what we want you to do. We want you to call him back and invite him to lunch and try to get him to tell you exactly what information he's looking for and what he's willing to pay for it. And because I'm a patriot, I said,
Starting point is 00:40:08 do you want me to wear a wire or something? And they said, no, we'll just be at the next table. We'll listen to everything. You're such a Boy Scout. I know, right? Well, kind of. I love my country. Everyone who lives in D.C. has had something like what you described,
Starting point is 00:40:21 but I've never heard of anybody going to the authorities over it. So the morning of the lunch, they called me and said, something came up, we can't do it. So do the lunch and write another memo. So I did. And I wrote up a comprehensive report. I sent it back to the FBI. Then they asked me to do it a third time, a fourth time, and a fifth time, which I did. And in the final lunch, it was at a place in Georgetown. Which place?
Starting point is 00:40:47 It was on Lower Wisconsin, the famous Italian place. Oh, where they give you after dinner drinks at the end. Yes. And the ladies in the front window making the pasta. Such a great restaurant. Philomena. Philomena. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:41:03 Sorry. It's been forever. Sorry. I love Philomena. It's wonderful. Such a great restaurant. Philomena. Philomena. Thank you. Sorry. Forever. Sorry. I love Philomena. It's wonderful. It really is wonderful. So I do it. And in that final lunch, he says, I got promoted.
Starting point is 00:41:16 I got my dream job. I'm going to be the number two at the Japanese embassy in Cairo. I said, congratulations. I shook his hand. I never talked to him again. A year later, I've been arrested and we get discovery and we see that there never was any Japanese diplomat. He was an FBI agent trying to get me to commit actual espionage. But I kept reporting the meetings back to the FBI. And then there was a memo to Peter Strzok.
Starting point is 00:41:51 Who actually put the cuffs on me in 2012. The Peter Strzok? The Peter Strzok. He actually, I'll get to that in a second. But one of the FBI agents wrote to Peter Strzok and said, we should end this operation. He's clearly not going to take the bait. No way. And I said to my lawyer, why would they do this?
Starting point is 00:42:15 I'm a patriot. The FBI did that to you? Because I hadn't committed espionage. We've got to burn the government down, actually. I mean, that's. Yeah. John Brennan specifically said, charge him committed espionage. We've got to burn the government down, actually. I mean, that's... Yeah. John Brennan specifically said, charge him with espionage.
Starting point is 00:42:29 Well, I hadn't committed espionage. And so they're trying to get me to commit it so they can charge me. I kept reporting it back to them. So who was the guy? The Japanese diplomat. No, he was just an Asian FBI agent who didn't speak a word of Japanese,
Starting point is 00:42:44 but he did speak Arabic. So he pretended. Oh, no, you're blowing my mind. He pretended to not speak English so that I wouldn't be alerted. Are you sure this happened? 100%. It was all in the discovery. But Brennan said, charge him with espionage.
Starting point is 00:43:01 And they were like, okay, well, we got to charge him with espionage. We have to create the crime in order to fit the charge. And what happened? They charged me with three counts of espionage. And they were like, okay, well, we got to charge them with espionage. We have to create the crime in order to fit the charge. And what happened? They charged me with three counts of espionage. Wait, how can you believe it? So like, I have friends
Starting point is 00:43:12 who have a lot of interesting information on the Oklahoma City bombing. Ooh. And my brain doesn't want to go there. Same with January 6th. Same with a bunch
Starting point is 00:43:22 of different operations the FBI has been involved in where it seems pretty obvious they're trying to get people to commit felonies acts of violence acts of terrorism and i'm like i just i i can't bring myself to believe that that happens in the united states but you're describing it oh tucker i was in prison with this poor guy, this guy was just a dope. And he and a couple of buddies were in a bar one day in Cleveland. And this other guy was there drinking with them. And he said, hey, you know what would be fun? We should blow up the Route 82 bridge. And they were saying they were drunk. They said, yeah, that would be so much fun. I'll get the explosives. Well, he's an FBI informant. The FBI
Starting point is 00:44:02 gives inert explosives. These idiots go out to the Route 82 bridge and try to blow it up. It doesn't blow up. And then the FBI comes out from behind the bushes. They got 20, 25, and 30 years in prison. Why would they do that to these guys? Why would they do that? It wasn't their idea to blow up the stupid bridge. But why were they targeted? Because this is how FBI agents get promoted. They don't get promoted by not arresting you they get promoted by arresting you and heaping charges on you so that eventually you go bankrupt and you give up and then they say okay here's the deal we'll drop all the charges but one you take a guilty plea to a felony and then you do you know
Starting point is 00:44:42 two years or whatever. But these guys went to trial because they said, no, it wasn't our idea. It wasn't our explosives. It was the FBI's explosives. And it was the FBI's guy that talked us into doing it. We were just having drinks that night. We weren't going to blow up a bridge. But that's how they get ahead in Washington. But they're targeting American citizens for destruction. Sure. Sure. That's what they do. You need to shut down the FBI right away.
Starting point is 00:45:18 I would not object to that at all. And in my case, they charged me with three counts of what is the fucking point of all of this pay your taxes i know right hoist the flag on your front lawn i do those things yeah i do too and and then they try to destroy you yeah and you're because your crime is you didn't like john brennan when you both were junior guys at CIA. Yeah. And I aired the dirty laundry. You said the president, George W. Bush, was lying because he is a liar, unfortunately. And so, like, let's spend millions of dollars.
Starting point is 00:46:00 Six million dollars of the taxpayers' money is what they spent on my to destroy you six million dollars pardon right away from trump but okay but sorry sorry you're making me emotional this is just too ridiculous i've known you a while i didn't i didn't know the details yeah it was it was ugly okay so like we just go back? Sure. So Brennan orders this investigation. The second Obama takes office, he goes to Eric Holder. Holder says, we actually, our staff attorneys don't think that he committed espionage. Then what happens? Like, do you know that they're investigating you again? No idea.
Starting point is 00:46:39 No idea that I'm being investigated. So I'm going on my merry way. I'm trying to build a business in consulting. I have some big name clients. Things are starting to look up. In fact, I was going to New York so often that my wife said, you know, maybe we should buy a little pied-à-terre there. So instead of staying in a hotel, because things are going really well right now, you should talk to a real estate agent. It so exciting right and then 22 fbi agents raided my house when uh january 12th 2012 2012 2012 they investigated me for three years did you know they're investigating no and then when we got the discovery they investigated you
Starting point is 00:47:23 for three years and this is now like quite a few years after the only thing you've done wrong is you gave an interview to ABC News saying three things. The president lied. We had a torture program. And what's the third one? And the torture was signed by the president. Yes. All true. All true. And so for five, six years, they investigate you without telling you. Now, what were they doing to investigate you? They had my phones tapped. Actually?
Starting point is 00:47:51 Actually tapped. Yep. They intercepted all of my emails. And I'll tell you something funny about that. For real? There's a service that you can pay like $36 a year called readnotify.com. So if I want to write you an email, I put, you know, tuckercarlson at aol.com.readnotify.com. And when you access it, it'll show me.
Starting point is 00:48:18 Tucker Carlson read your email. He read it for two minutes and 37 seconds. He forwarded it. He deleted it. He filed it, whatever. And this is where he was located. And it has a town and it'll have sometimes geo coordinates. So I, I wanted to write a freedom of information act request because I was thinking of writing a book about a, a, an author, a novelist from the fifties. And I wanted to know whether he had worked at the CIA. So I sent this Freedom of Information Act request. Actually, I called a journalist that I knew who writes these things every day. And I said, I don't want it to get rejected. So can you walk
Starting point is 00:48:58 me through the process? He said, yeah, just send me what you have and I'll correct it for you. So I sent it to him and I got a read notify notification and I looked at it and it said accessed in Washington DC. And I said to him, I called him and I said, you're not in Washington today, right? And he said, no, I'm in LA. Why? I said, because somebody just accessed the email and it's in Washington. I said, hold on, because it has geo coordinates attached to it. So I took the geocoordinates, I put it into Google Earth. And you know, Google Earth, it shows you the whole planet and then it kind of zeroes in on the FBI's Washington field office. No way. And he said, are they looking at you
Starting point is 00:49:37 or are they looking at me? I said, I haven't done anything. They're probably looking at you. Because you didn't even know you were under investigation. No idea. But they were looking at me and they were accessing all of my emails. They even followed my family and me into church, into Target to go shopping. And they would write these stupid reports. Subject and his family went to church, sat in the first pew. Hour and 15 minutes later, subject and family went home.
Starting point is 00:50:08 All because you called the president a liar? I was in a restaurant the other night, in fact, this weekend, and I had a little trouble hearing what people were saying. And I thought to myself, I'm a little young to go deaf. Why? Well, because I grew up shooting, bird hunting, target shooting. And I remember my father saying, just stick a Marlboro filter in your opposite ear and you'll be fine. I wish we'd had suppressors, but we didn't. You can now. Check out Silencer Central. Silencers play a crucial role in improving accuracy, maximizing your experience, and protecting your hearing. They're not dangerous or scary. It's just the
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Starting point is 00:51:34 Even as flames rose in the background? It was ridiculous, but it was also a metaphor for the way our leaders run this country. They're constantly telling you, everything is fine. Everything is fine. Don't worry. Everything's under control. Nothing to see here. Move along and obey. No one believes that. Crime is not going away. Supply chains remain fragile. It does feel like some kind of global conflict could break out at any time. So the question is, if things went south tomorrow, would you be ready? Well, if you're not certain that you'd be ready, you need Ammo Squared. Ammo Squared is the only service that lets you build an ammunition stockpile automatically. You literally set it on autopilot. You pick the calibers you want,
Starting point is 00:52:20 how much you want to save every month, then they'll ship it to you or they'll store it for you and ship it when you say so. You get 24-7 access to manage the whole thing. So don't let the people in charge, don't let CNN lull you into a fake sense of safety. Take control of your life, protect your family, be prepared. Go to AmmoSquared.com to learn more. Am I missing part of this? I don't... Brendan complained that I had aired the CIA's dirty laundry. But that was, I think, more of just an excuse to cover up his own, you know, narcissism. But I mean, right.
Starting point is 00:52:59 But like airing dirty laundry, calling liars liars. Yeah. These are not crimes. No, they're not crimes. Exactly. But am I missing something? Did you kill anybody? Were you dealing heroin at all?
Starting point is 00:53:11 Nope. Nothing. And then you didn't start some kind of fake cryptocurrency company. I wish I had thought of it. I'd be rich today. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Right.
Starting point is 00:53:23 I hope at some point we can talk about all the actual criminals who are now richer living in my neighborhood. Right. Richer than ever. Okay, so, but you don't know any of this is going on. When do you get confirmation that you're the target of an investigation? The FBI called me. I was sitting at my computer one morning writing an op-ed, and the FBI called me, and I looked at my phone phone and it said Federal Bureau of Investigation. And I thought, what in the world is that? So I answered it. I said, hi, this is John. May I help you? And he says, hi, this is special agent.
Starting point is 00:53:51 I forget what. Do you remember that case that you helped us out with when you were on Capitol Hill? Because remember, I didn't know that this Japanese guy was an FBI agent yet. I said, sure. This is so freaking bonkers. And he said, well, we have another case and we need your help. And I said, because I'm an idiot and a patriot, I said, anything for the FBI, what do you want from me? That's what I told him. He said, can you come down here tomorrow at 10?
Starting point is 00:54:19 I said, absolutely. So I went at 10 o'clock and I said, what do you want me to do? Was this to the FBI building downtown? Yes. I said, is it with the Russians? Who is it? Well, before we get to that, he says, I wanted to ask you, I just read your book, which was a lie. I had a book that had come out two years earlier. I just read your book and I just wanted to ask you a couple of questions. And it was all about the torture program. And I'm getting more and more nervous. And finally- What were the questions?
Starting point is 00:54:51 Well, when you were in Pakistan and you were describing this piece of technology, did you get that cleared by the CIA? I said, of course I got it cleared. I said, it took me nine months to write that book and 22 months to get it cleared at the CIA's publications review board. Well, you know, what about this guy? You mentioned this guy. Do you remember? You just say John Doe. Do you remember his name? I'm like, yeah, I remember his name. And then I said, what are we talking about here? And then one of them said, well, we probably should tell you that as we're speaking right now, we're raiding your house. We're confiscating all of your electronics. And you're going to be charged with a lot of crimes.
Starting point is 00:55:36 What? That's what he said. And thank God. Wait, as you were talking, they were raiding your house? My wife later told me that as soon as I got on the metro to go to the FBI, they just broke down the door. Was she home? With our two-month-old son. Yep. And then one of the female FBI agents.
Starting point is 00:56:03 I don't think drain the swamp is not strong enough. No, it's not. Burn it down. Burn it down. Burn it down. Yes. You know, this is neither here nor there because my opinion is not important. But when Kash Patel was named the director of the FBI, I wrote an op-ed for a leftist news outlet celebrating this appointment.
Starting point is 00:56:23 Saying this is exactly what we need to do we need to tear the place down to its studs if there's going to be a federal law enforcement organization this one needs to be scrapped and rebuilt and nobody else has the guts to do it yeah let's build them in your headquarters though. Yeah. Yeah. In Kansas, maybe. Yeah, Leavenworth. Oh, excuse me. One final sentence. I thank God that I had the presence of mind to say, I want to speak to my attorney and I'm not saying anything else.
Starting point is 00:56:58 And that was the only reason they didn't put the cuffs on me right there. So I said, I want to leave. And I got up and they said, just a minute, just a minute. I said, no, if I'm not under arrest, that means I'm free to leave. And as I walked out, Peter Strzok was standing there and he said, did he implicate himself? And the guy says, not really, but I'll tell you about it in a second. And he turned to me and he said, you're free to go. Did you have any idea what this was about?
Starting point is 00:57:26 No, no idea. No idea. They charged me with this. This is like a bad dream. It was a nightmare. It was a nightmare. I went outside. I called my lawyer.
Starting point is 00:57:39 He told me, come to the office immediately. I went, told him everything that happened. He told me, try to take it easy. I said, this him everything that happened. He told me, try to take it easy. I said, this is a death penalty case. He said, just take it easy. They're not going to see the death penalty. What was happening? Did you call home and ask your wife?
Starting point is 00:57:53 Yeah, and she was just wonderful. She was as calm as I wished I could be. And she said, the FBI is here. I said, I know. I said, are they treating you with respect? And she said, well,
Starting point is 00:58:10 one of the female agents said, why don't you sit with that beautiful baby and don't get up? You want to go fuck yourself. Exactly. Excuse me. Exactly. Yeah. Talking that way to your wife with a newborn baby and then within hours of course
Starting point is 00:58:28 they leak it to the media immediately so within hours all four of my clients and these were like household name clients that i had for this consulting business i was trying to get up and running all four of them dropped me that day that day and then immediately profiles encourage a word oh i'll tell you the phone we got we caught we counted actually we got something like 65 or 67 calls from the media that that night i just shut my phone off we unplugged the we had landlines back then uh one of the local networks put a truck in front of our house with a spotlight on the house. No way. Oh, it was humiliating.
Starting point is 00:59:11 Just utterly humiliating. And I just want to say for the fifth time, because at this point, I mean, you're being treated like El Chapo. Yeah. Your only crime was an ABC interview with Brian Ross in 2007, in which you say, yes, the CIA does have a torture program. I know because I worked there and the president authorized it and lied about it in public.
Starting point is 00:59:34 That's, that's, that's your sum total of your crimes. That was it. I'm going to cut to the chase here. This is so unbelievable. So you go to your lawyer's office, you find out you're being charged with espionage.
Starting point is 00:59:45 I called my wife. She came and picked me up, and I told her, I'm going to kill myself. This is a death penalty case. I haven't done anything wrong. And she's like, you're not going to kill yourself. Let's just take this one step at a time. What did the lawyers say?
Starting point is 01:00:02 And then we started taking it from there when did you get arrested uh january uh january uh no four days later that was on a ah so this is another trick that they use and they did this with the j6 people the fbi loves loves loves to make their arrests on Fridays, right? Or Thursdays after five because there are no federal arraignments on Fridays. So you get arrested on a Thursday evening and you have to spend Thursday night, Friday night,
Starting point is 01:00:36 Saturday night and Sunday night in jail. And then you get to go to arraignment on Monday. No, only because I asked to see my attorney. And so they told me I had to turn myself in at the FBI Monday morning at 10. Tucker, when I tell you I had these guys on me from Thursday to Monday, like white on rice, I mean, six feet off my bumper everywhere we went. Even one of my neighbors called to say he had gotten up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom. And he looked out the window and he said, buddy, there are like carloads of people out there at three o'clock in the morning, just staring at your house. And I said, I know, I know it's the FBI. There's nothing I can do. And so they followed
Starting point is 01:01:21 us like there were FBI cars on either side of us and behind us as we drove to the FBI that Monday morning. And then when I got out of the car and walked into the FBI headquarters, they broke off. And then they chained me to a metal bench. So I'm like this. Actually? With a handcuff. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:43 And I said. And Strzok was there. Oh, yeah, he was there and you know but I didn't know I didn't know he was Peter Strzok until I got a call in 2019 from a reporter at the Washington Post 20 no no 2017 reporter for the Washington Post and he said uh hey I wanted to get your thoughts on Peter Strzok being fired from the FBI. I said, I don't know anything about Peter Strzok other than what I've read in the Washington Post. He said, no, Peter Strzok arrested you in January of 2012. I said, that was Peter Strzok? He said, yeah, it was Peter Strzok. He was the head of the counterintelligence division. It was Peter Strzok that wrote the reports on your arrest.
Starting point is 01:02:27 He's the one that physically put the cuffs on you. And I said, oh my God. I said, yes, I'll give you a statement. He said, what's the statement? And I said, the statement is that karma is a bitch and now it's his turn. So all they printed was now it's his turn. I think he wound up getting like a million dollar settlement, actually. He did.
Starting point is 01:02:51 And there was a GoFundMe. He got richer. He got richer. And there was a GoFundMe that raised another half a million dollars. Yeah. This is so... It's a nightmare. So, okay, you're charged just to...
Starting point is 01:03:06 Yeah, three counts of espionage. Three counts of espionage, but not specifying who you spied for. Nope. There was never even an accusation that I had spied for anybody. One count of making a false statement. We were never exactly sure what the false statement was supposed to have been. It had something to do with the clearance process for my book and one count of violating the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982. Did you reveal the identities of anyone?
Starting point is 01:03:36 Here's that story. In the summer of 2008, six months after I blew the whistle, I got an email from a journalist who was writing a book on the CIA's rendition program. I told him, I don't know anything about renditions. Kidnapping was not my thing at the agency. I can't help you. So he sends me a list of a dozen names. He said, can you introduce me to any of these people so that I can interview them? I said, I don't know any of these people. Then he sent me a second list of a dozen names. And I said, look, you clearly know this better than I do. I don't know any of these people. And then he said, there's a guy that you mentioned on like page 165 of your book. You called him John. Can I mention, can I interview him? And I said, oh, you're talking about John Doe. I don't know whatever happened to him. He's probably retired and living in Virginia somewhere.
Starting point is 01:04:34 They got me. I confirmed the surname of a former colleague. That was it. That's the Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982. And they knew that because they were listening to the call. Well, it got worse. They didn't recognize that as a violation until the journalist who wasn't really writing a book gave the name to Human Rights Watch. Human Rights Watch gave the name to the Guantanamo defense attorneys. The Guantanamo defense attorneys wrote a classified motion telling the judge at Guantanamo, we'd like to interview this John Doe. The judge said, hey, this name is probably classified. He gave it to the FBI. They gave it to the CIA. The CIA gave it to John Brennan.
Starting point is 01:05:31 This is crazy. What do you mean the journalist wasn't really writing a book? He was pretending to write a book on the Abu Omar rendition from Milan. There really was no book. He was really working for the Guantanamo defense attorneys as kind of a private eye without telling anybody. What? Yeah. Man, the level of treachery in and around Washington. Welcome to Washington.
Starting point is 01:05:54 It's that bad. Oh, I'm very aware of that. I'm so glad I'm not there anymore. Oh my God, I can't wait until the day I can leave. It's like nothing is as it seems. Everyone's lying. Everyone's pretending to be something he's not. And underneath it all is the willingness to hurt people, to kill them.
Starting point is 01:06:16 Yes. Yeah. Yes, exactly. It's not just like, you know, we're competing and I'm elbowing you out of the way. I'm going to get that promotion before you do. It's like if I need to make sure you die in prison, that's okay. That's really sick. Speaking of which, I took a plea to make the,
Starting point is 01:06:34 first of all, they waited until I went bankrupt. And then they dropped all three of the espionage charges. Okay, so what were you facing initially? You get charged, you get- 45 years. 45 years in prison. And one of the attorneys in the Obama Holder Justice Department said to me at the first proffer meeting, they offered me 45 years. And this woman says, take the deal, Mr. Kiriakou, and you may live to meet your grandchildren.
Starting point is 01:07:06 Do you remember her name? I don't. I remember she had a Vietnamese name, like Nguyen or Tran or something like that. But she ended up getting promoted in the Biden Justice Department. Really? It became very important. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:21 I hope that she becomes famous for that. I hope so, too. Because that level of cruelty to another human being, there she becomes famous for that i hope so too that level of cruelty to another human being is there's no justification for that they wanted me to die in prison that was the plan and so my attorney said you haven't done anything wrong we're gonna go to trial right we're gonna go to trial and i said okay let's do it anyone allege that you lied ever ever never never and you know that's a really important point and we talked about that okay, let's do it. Can I say, did anyone allege that you lied ever? Ever. Never. Never. And you know, that's a really important point. And we talked about that. We talked about me testifying in my trial because literally everything I said was the truth. In fact, fast forward to December
Starting point is 01:07:57 of 2014, I'm going to be released from prison in six weeks. And I called my wife and I was allowed to call her for 15 minutes every other day. And I said, how was your day? And she said, it was great. And I said, great? Why was it so great? And she said, because the Senate torture report came out today and it proved that everything you said was true. So I said, you know what? That made it worth it. So you went to prison, you were facing life and actually you're facing the death penalty initially because you told the truth about other people's lies. Correct.
Starting point is 01:08:33 So the truth teller, and I'm just, I want to put a very fine point on this because I think it is a trend and I think it's a sign of evil. You know, the definition of evil is lies, lying. And the truth teller faces death. The liars thrive. So that's a system that can't continue. That's not a virtuous system. That's an evil system.
Starting point is 01:08:54 You're exactly right. And may I add a statistic? The Espionage Act was written in 1917. Yes. To combat German saboteurs during the First World War. 1917 being one of the darkest periods in American history. When it comes to civil liberties, one of the darkest periods. The most anti, almost un-American moment, really. Without any question. Probably one of the worst presidents we ever had, Woodrow Wilson. Double without any question. Yeah. Destroy Christian
Starting point is 01:09:20 Europe for no reason at all. Right. Yeah. The espionage has never been meaningfully updated. In fact, it doesn't even mention the words classified information because the classification system wasn't invented until the 1950s. Most Americans didn't have electricity in 1917. Exactly right. Right. Between 1917
Starting point is 01:09:39 and the election of Barack Obama, three Americans were charged with espionage for speaking to the press. Under Barack Obama, eight people, almost three times, all previous presidents combined,
Starting point is 01:09:55 were charged with espionage for speaking to the press. Three times. And none of them was charged with lying. Not a single one of them. Because lying is not a crime that's right telling the truth is a crime that's all you need to know that's it can't support a system in which telling the truth is a crime and lying is rewarded sorry pretty much
Starting point is 01:10:16 every day we hear from desperate american retailers all asking the same question when can we start selling the world's best nicotine pouch how willP? Well, we finally have an answer right now. We're opening up wholesale orders for stores that want to be the first to carry ALP. It's super easy. Go to alppouch.com slash wholesale and sign up. We'll send you cases of ALP and your customers will be grateful. Don't wait until they start begging for ALP before they start moving to another store down the road to get the Alp. Beat the crowd. Get Alp now. AlpPouch.com slash wholesale. I mentioned to you last night privately that one of my attorneys really put this whole thing into a couple of sentences. And it was so powerful, so profound what he said that it has stuck with me. I decided to turn down the Justice Department's best and
Starting point is 01:11:11 final offer of two and a half years in prison. I said, I haven't done anything wrong. And I had this stupid idea that as soon as I get in front of a jury, they're going to see how ridiculous this is and I'm going to be acquitted. Well, that's nuts. So he said to me, you know what your problem is? Your problem is you think this is about justice and it's not about justice. It's about mitigating damage. Take the deal. And so I took the deal.
Starting point is 01:11:41 What was I going to do? I have five kids at home. Should I take two and a half years? I'm going to do 23 months or should I going to do? I have five kids at home. Should I take two and a half years? I'm going to do 23 months? Or should I roll the dice? And I said to him, I said, if I turn the deal down, what am I realistically looking at here?
Starting point is 01:11:56 And he said, 12 to 18 years. Take the deal. So I took it. For telling the truth in an ABC interview. How long was that ABC interview? 30 minutes, 40 minutes. If you had to replay your life, live it again, would you have done that? Yes, actually.
Starting point is 01:12:16 Wow. I would have. The only thing I would have done differently is I would have had my attorney sitting with me. I had to be reactive by hiring an attorney after blowing the whistle. So we had to respond to the media and respond to the Justice Department. I would have hired the attorney first. But yes, somebody had to say something. Somebody. It's these Bush people and the Obama people who covered up the Bush administration's crimes that were the criminals. The amazing thing is that Barack Obama, I mean, I was there. I knew Obama. He ran against all that stuff. Yeah, he did. Right? Iraq was the bad war. Afghanistan was the good war. And he ran a campaign
Starting point is 01:13:02 against that. But he ended up throwing into prison the guy who told the truth about it. Mark Halperin and John Heilman wrote a book about the, well, both the 2008 election, the 2012 election. And in the second book, they quote Obama twice, saying things that just put it all into perspective. Number one, he said, I never said I was a liberal. Like, why are the liberals so mad? That he's a warmongering, you know, neocon. I never said I was a liberal, he said. And the other thing he said that really struck me,
Starting point is 01:13:37 he was talking about the drone program. He killed 10 times more people with drones than George W. Bush did. And he said, you know, I never realized I would be so good at killing people. He's a cold human being. What is that? That's sociopathy. Yeah, well, for sure. You have to be a sociopath to even think that way.
Starting point is 01:13:56 Yes. But he surrounded himself with other sociopaths like John Brennan, who for sport would ruin people's lives to the point where they're actively considering suicide or making plans to die in prison. These are Americans he's doing this to. Americans. Mm-hmm. Clearly a man capable of great violence. And you wonder if he's involved in plotting physical violence against Americans now. Would not surprise me at all.
Starting point is 01:14:26 I would not be surprised by anything anymore. You know, when President Trump, I had to laugh, when President Trump stripped him of his security clearance, I went on one of the networks, well, I went on Fox, but I think I also went on MSNBC that week, to say,
Starting point is 01:14:43 why does John Brennan deserve a security clearance? He's a private citizen. Do you have one? I don't. I don't either. See? So why does John Brennan get one? I agree. So I said, of course the president should strip John Brennan of the security clearance. And then when he disallowed Brennan from entering into a government building,
Starting point is 01:15:00 I went on Fox and they said, is this legit? I said, of course it is. This guy is so dangerous that he shouldn't be anywhere near a federal building. With what we know, he's plotted in the past. God knows what he's cooking up today. No, I wouldn't trust him in a federal building. I wouldn't trust him in a position of trust. and I wouldn't trust him with a security clearance. He's dangerous. Well, all these people have security clearances, which really are the currency in Washington. Very much so. They conduct business without one in D.C. because everything is classified.
Starting point is 01:15:35 That's right. Not to protect American national security, but for the obvious power advantage it gives the holders of those clearances. That's right. So, you know, I think there should be a real attempt to do that to a lot of people. I agree. But there won't be. No. As you know.
Starting point is 01:15:52 No, there won't be. So anyway, you plead. You get how much time? I got 30 months. And at sentencing, my attorneys ask that I be sent to a minimum security work camp. There are no bars on the windows. There are no locks on the doors. You're free to come and go. Most of those guys worked in town at the local university, sweeping the floors or whatever. And there was a, there was a possibility that I, I could get out in 17 months with good behavior and halfway house, not halfway house, but home confinement.
Starting point is 01:16:28 So I said, okay, this will be easy. So I get to the prison. It's very strange when you go to prison. If you're not remanded at sentencing, you have to physically drive to the prison and knock on the door and say, I'm here to turn myself in. The opposite of a jailbreak. Yes, it's nuts. It's nuts. And of course, I've got two cars with me. There's a documentary film crew and my lawyers and my cousin.
Starting point is 01:16:58 And we have this caravan that go to the prison with us. So you've already said goodbye to your children? Already said goodbye to my children. What was that like? They were very young. And so I said, you remember I had that fight with the FBI? And they said, yes. And I said, well, I lost. And so I have to go to Pennsylvania for a while and I'm going to teach bad guys how to read and write because I figured I'd probably teach a GED class or something. And I said, but you're going to come and visit me all the time. And then I'm going to come back home and everything's going to be great.
Starting point is 01:17:35 How old were they? They were eight, six, and one. Your little kids. And so- Eight, six, and one. In the visiting room, there was a sign on one of the doors that said inmates only. And my eight-year-old said, dad, what's an inmate? And without thinking, I said, it's a prisoner.
Starting point is 01:17:57 And he said, wait a minute, are you a prisoner here or are you a teacher here? And I said, buddy, I'm a prisoner here or are you a teacher here and i said buddy i'm a prisoner here but we're gonna get past this it's gonna go quickly and i'm gonna be home and everything's gonna be good again oh it took everything i had not to that makes me emotional yeah. Yeah. Oh, that's bad. Yeah. I'm out of adjectives actually for that. So you didn't wind up in the work camp? No. The CIA under John Brennan, who was- He was director by this point.
Starting point is 01:18:37 No, but he was soon to be director. Actually, 2012. Yeah, he was director at that point. Yes. Yes. Thanks for correcting me. The CIA objected. They objected to my placement in a minimum security camp.
Starting point is 01:18:50 Well, they're vindictive, aren't they? I guess ask Julian Assange how vindictive they are. Well, I got there. Exactly. Exactly. Exactly. Ask Julian Assange. They almost killed him.
Starting point is 01:19:02 So. Under Mike Pompeo plotted his murder. Literally. Who's still free, by the way., Mike Pompeo plotted his murder. Literally. Who's still free, by the way. Is Mike Pompeo in jail? I haven't seen any announcement.
Starting point is 01:19:10 Are you allowed as an appointee to a government, not elected, just an appointee, are you allowed to plot the murder of people who embarrass the agency
Starting point is 01:19:19 you are? You are not. Oh, you're not allowed. Okay. You are not. You can't, so you can't use federal funds to murder people
Starting point is 01:19:24 who embarrass you. Only if you're Barack Obama, but anybody else not. So you can't use federal funds to murder people who embarrass you? Only if you're Barack Obama, but anybody else, no, you can't do that. So if you do that, have you committed a crime? Yeah, a serious crime. A serious crime would be attempted murder or resigned from the agency for talking to a Kurdish group about killing Saddam Hussein so why wasn't Mike Pompeo arrested for talking about or planning he did more than talking they planned to murder Julian Assange I don't know that's a whole different conversation to sue me for saying that. Well, the facts are a defense. I hope he will. I hope he
Starting point is 01:20:08 will. There you go. Discovery would be fun. Anyway, sorry. It's also frustrating. So you say goodbye to your children. I do. I say goodbye to my children. The CIA makes certain you don't go to the work camp. You go to a prison. Yeah. It was five days before I got access to a phone at the prison. And I called my lawyer. What was that like, the first five days before I got access to a phone at the prison. And I called my lawyer. What was that like, the first five days? It was, you know, looking back, I think I was in shock. Did you think about fleeing? Everybody does.
Starting point is 01:20:36 Yeah, I don't know that I would submit to that. I mean, you never know until you're there. You find yourself constantly looking at the fences, constantly calculating how bad you'll get constantly looking at the fences constantly calculating how bad you'll get cut up with the concertina wire before you report to prison did you think like i served this country i grew up here you're from a you know middle-class family pro-america no you never thought about fleeing the country why no because i was right and they were wrong. And you know, the truth, Tucker always has a way of coming out. Always. Sometimes it takes a while, but the truth always comes out. And in fact, the deputy director for operations at the CIA under Brennan, Jose Rodriguez, another notorious murderer, tweeted at me the night before I left for prison and he said don't drop the soap he actually tweeted that at you and I tweeted back at him and I said Jose
Starting point is 01:21:33 I am on the right side of history and you are not these people are morally diseased when Michael Avenatti who I mocked for years as the creepy porn lawyer, went to prison, I felt sad for him. Sure, because you're a human being. I despised him, but he's in prison. Ever been to a prison? I've been to many prisons. You don't want to be in prison. You don't want to be in prison. To cheer when a man goes to prison and your only crime was embarrassing them by telling the truth.
Starting point is 01:22:01 Whatever happened to the Jose character? He took his $6 million book advance and moved to Florida. Actually? Doesn't this, I mean, why are you not insane? I know, right? There's a lightness to you that... Thank you. Maybe I'm an idiot, but I really believe that I'm on the right side of this and i'm hopeful that president trump will pardon me i have a an amazing amount of support i i i hope that you get a pardon this
Starting point is 01:22:36 afternoon i really do this is horrifying his enemies are the people who did this to you. Yes. He ran against this kind of behavior. Yes, he did. And he righted it with the J6 people, with Rod Blagojevich. I wrote Rod Blagojevich a letter when he went to prison. This is before I was ever in trouble. Yeah. I wrote him a letter and I said, you don't know me. I don't live in Illinois, but this is a travesty. It was. I remember. There's no crime that was actually committed. Oh, I know. And then 14 years? Have people lost their minds? I know. But the president, you know, you and I were talking about this privately. The president has been unlike almost every other president in that he's not waiting for the political safe period to issue pardons after an election, right? He just issues them as they come to him.
Starting point is 01:23:31 To pardon Mark Rich because he's sleeping with his wife. Precisely. For example. Precisely. You know who else did that? Historians have told us, historians have documented that Abraham Lincoln used to sit up late into the night pardoning people by candlelight because he said, for example, that army deserters shouldn't be executed for cowardice. I agree. He didn't wait until after a congressional election. And neither does this president.
Starting point is 01:24:03 Yeah, the British army disgraced itself by they they murdered a lot of their own men yes they did who snapped um cowardice is contemptible of course but you shouldn't kill a boy because he runs away exactly it's disgusting it's disgusting it's like get you know regain your senses for a second um so anyway the first five days, you were in shock. I was in shock. I was in prison for 40 minutes. And the only thing that the cop who processed me said to me was, if somebody comes into your cell uninvited, that's an act of aggression. And I said, great, thank you.
Starting point is 01:24:39 And then he walked away. And sure enough, these two guys walk in. One of them had a swastika that took up his entire neck came up onto his face the other one had fuck you tattooed on his on his eyelids it's like kind of a movie it was nuts and i jumped up and i said what do you want because i thought it's two of them it's one of me but but I'm going to do my best. You got to, yeah. And the one with the swastika said, are you the CIA guy? And I said, yeah, so? And he said, are you a fag?
Starting point is 01:25:11 And I said, no, I'm not a fag. You know, I haven't even said that word in so many years. We're not in Georgetown anymore. And he says, are you a rat? I said, no, I'm not a rat. I didn't have anybody else in my case. And he said, are you a chomo? I i'm not a rat i didn't have anybody else in my case and he said are you a chomo i said i don't know what that word means and he goes chomo like i'm stupid chomo child molester i said no i'm not a child molester and he says okay you can sit with the
Starting point is 01:25:38 arians in the cafeteria and i said oh And you know, funny thing, a year later, I lived right across the hall from a senior captain, the number three in one of New York's five families, right? And he said- Good guy? Great guy. Not even good guy, a great guy. I would give him- A good fellow, really. He was a good fellow.
Starting point is 01:26:03 I'd give him the New York times every day. He would give me the New York post. So we traded papers every day. So, uh, you know, he got a Christmas card one year from Derek Jeter. That really impressed me.
Starting point is 01:26:17 I've met Derek Jeter. Nice man. Sweet guy. Yeah, absolutely. So anyway, he said to me, let me ask you something.
Starting point is 01:26:23 Why do you sit with those Nazi retards in the cafeteria? I said, I don't know. My first day here, they told me to sit with them. And he says, very dramatically, from today, you're with the Italians. And so from that day, I was with the Italians. And you're still friends with some of them. I am. We were talking about about at dinner last night
Starting point is 01:26:45 we talk frequently good guys that was a misapplication of federal power obviously you don't want organized crime on the other hand if that's your number one look at what's happened to America post mafia has it gotten a lot better
Starting point is 01:27:01 oh no it hasn't Bensonhurst is not improved. No, it hasn't. No, I'm aware. I'm aware. They did a better job with Staten Island than the current rulers have. So, at this point, your case is well known. Well, it's known.
Starting point is 01:27:23 Okay, I'm in the media, so I'm sort of following it, but I don't really know. It's a leak investigation. You've somehow betrayed your country. That's all we know. Right. But there are some people who are paying attention and they're making a lot of noise, but it doesn't matter. No. It doesn't matter. You know, it's funny. My support came from people on the hard left.
Starting point is 01:27:48 Yes. And people on the libertarian right. Right. It led me to the conclusion that the ideological spectrum is not a straight line. No. It's a circle. And it meets at a certain point. Yes.
Starting point is 01:27:59 Where civil liberties are concerned. I agree. And so, I started following other people's cases that would never have interested me in the past. And it was always cases dealing with government overreach, like reassessing Ruby Ridge, right? Or Waco. I mean, Ruby Ridge was really just absolutely murdered the guy's child and his wife, shot his dog. Randy Weaver, because his shotgun was two inches too short or something. Yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 01:28:34 Lon Haruchi, I think was the name of the FBI sniper. I want to say it again. Lon Haruchi. Murdered them in cold blood. Shot a woman? Really? Yeah, a woman. Who's just standing in the door.
Starting point is 01:28:41 Holding a baby. Holding a baby. Uh-huh. That's right. Yeah, and that was, and by the way, that was not only never punished, Lon Haruchi was never punished for that. He should have gone right to prison for murder, and his superior should have gone right to prison for authorizing that murder.
Starting point is 01:29:01 But it was like, at the time it was like, oh, were you a Ruby Ridge person? Like, you care? Right. Like, you're a wacko or somethingo you're some kind of right-wing extremist yes if i was a right-wing extremist so i knew about it and i was really bothered by it right-wing in the sense that i i believed in the bill of rights i don't think you should be able to murder women for no reason like people begin sending me books by john whitehead and i remember just blowing through these books saying,
Starting point is 01:29:25 why have I never heard of this guy before? I mean, he's talking sense here about government overreach. Case after case after case. All documented. I have that book on my shelf in my office. Government of Wolves. It's unbelievable, but the media, not to blame everything on the media, but it is kind of the mouthpiece of the blob. Yes, it is. Yeah, the Praetorian Guard, really. The protectors, the bodyguards of the murderers and the liars. They just, man, they swarmed anybody who expressed concern about these cases.
Starting point is 01:29:59 That's right. They try to paint you as a radical. A conspiracy theorist. Conspiracy theorist. A term that was created by the CIA, by the way. Yes. Who shot the man's wife. So your views, and I should have done a, people can Google you and I hope that they will,
Starting point is 01:30:17 but it's hard to overstate the departure that this turn is from the rest of your life. Oh, yeah. Because you weren't a CIA paramilitary. You were an actual just like officer. Case officer, yeah. Case officer. Recruiting spies to steal secrets. Multilingual.
Starting point is 01:30:31 You speak Greek. You speak Arabic, which is like considered basically impossible for native English speakers. You're a scholar, literally. And kind of an academic in some ways. I mean, right? I'm a professor of intelligence studies now at the University of Salamanca in Spain.
Starting point is 01:30:48 And I taught for four years at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia. Right. And it's funny, when they called me to hire me, I said, wow, I'm flattered. But you and I probably disagree on 99% of the issues. Why would you want me to teach in the Jesse Helms School of Government? And the dean said, because torture is not Christian. It certainly isn't. And I said, you know what? I'll take the job. It certainly isn't. And I love those guys. I'm still in touch with them. And killing unarmed defenseless people is immoral. It is. And it's also just dishonorable
Starting point is 01:31:20 in the most secular terms. That's right. If a man is handcuffed, you don't punch him in the face because it's bad for him, but it also degrades you. That's right. If a man is handcuffed, you don't punch him in the face because it's bad for him, but it also degrades you. That's right. It does. It's not how honorable men behave. PTSD and moral injury are real. I totally agree.
Starting point is 01:31:34 We damage ourselves. It's also disgusting. Like, what is this anyway? I mean, I sort of believe that the country was good because it was virtuous. And like, certain things we don't do because we're above
Starting point is 01:31:45 that we don't send our wives to go fight wars for us now we don't torture people who are chained because they can't fight back that's right what is this anyway what what is this and then what happens when you go in and you say oh i accidentally killed him oh well we just bury him out back that's literally what they did actually just bury him out back that's literally what they did actually just bury him out back yeah it's just hard to make a moral case for the things that you're doing when you behave that way agreed and um and and to see once again the only man who tells the truth face the penalty and the liars thrive is really dispiriting. It is. I'm confident things are going to turn around.
Starting point is 01:32:29 I think so too. I hope so. I pray that. So how long were you in prison in the end? 23 months. I didn't get a single day of halfway house time. They made sure that I did every day of that sentence. They had to take seven months off for good behavior. They had to, because it's legally mandated. But I was in that prison for every last day that they could get out of me. Were any elected officials sympathetic at all? uh yeah well yes but none were really willing to go out on a limb um gus billericas who's a congressman from florida he was very supportive and friendly i i should add it wasn't just gus gus is a sweetheart of a guy it was the whole greek american community man they're cohesive they are we still i'm aware of yes so
Starting point is 01:33:26 they they really went to the mat for me i got fantastic press coverage in greece the greek government hired me to help them write a new whistleblower protection law when i got out of prison it was my first trip i had to get permission from the judge to travel because i had just gotten out of prison so that was fun. But really, and Jim Moran, who was a Democratic congressman from, Jim was very helpful. Very, very helpful. But that was
Starting point is 01:33:54 it besides the two of them. Moran was, I don't even know if he's still alive. I knew Moran pretty well. Drank too much. Florid and wild private life like crazy town and I disagreed to them on all domestic policy issues passionately
Starting point is 01:34:10 because he was very liberal but his foreign policy views were out of the mainstream he was not a neocon and boy watching the job they did on Jim Moran how many times did they primary him? Jeremy Bash ran against him, ghouls like that, who were just like on the merits.
Starting point is 01:34:29 So Jim Moran seemed like possibly hadn't honored his marriage vows and drank too much. Okay. Okay. And he was like a loud mouth and he was always ready to beat people up. He was like this big Irish guy. Okay, got it. Those were his sins as I understand them. The people who were against him had like committed genocide.
Starting point is 01:34:45 Yeah, right. Right. And they were like, it was crazy. It was crazy. And they systematically destroyed Jim Moran's life. They did. For asking like pretty obvious questions like, why did 9-11 happen? Right.
Starting point is 01:35:00 They don't want to talk about that. Shouldn't we know? You'd think. Assuming that it was exactly what they told us it was, which was this group of 19 Arabs, mostly Saudis, decided to attack the United States, whatever. Let's just say that's true. I'm assuming it is true.
Starting point is 01:35:16 Why did they do that? Why were they willing to die for that? What were they mad about? But that's the question. What were they mad about? That's what Jim Moran asked. And I'm like, oh, by the way, Jim Moran. Then they plastered.
Starting point is 01:35:27 They Glenn Greenwald him. Big time. They did. They kind of drove him out. I think he lost his seat in the end. He retired. He's at a political consulting firm in McLean, Virginia. I ran into him at a conference about a year ago.
Starting point is 01:35:43 No way. He's a lovely man. He really is. I always secretly liked him. I had him on. I interviewed him a lot. And he would get, you know, per his ethnic stereotype, he'd get like red in the face. And I'm like, spit would come out. But I kind of liked him.
Starting point is 01:35:59 You know, he was like, I liked him. Yeah. Sorry, not to. And Gus Bilirakis is one of those guys who's just a genuinely nice guy. And he's actually, he's quite an accomplished legislator, which he doesn't get a lot of credit for. But he's a good guy. And so, you know, a fellow Greek-American needed some help and he was there to help. Wow.
Starting point is 01:36:23 Have you ever had any contact with CIA since you got out of prison? No. Well, not other than sending articles and books in for clearance. Right. No. You know, when I got out of prison, I finished house arrest. I had 90 days of house arrest and people started calling me, hey, let's meet for lunch or let's have a pizza or whatever and every time i would go to meet them i'd be under surveillance and the first few times still yeah but from whom it had to be the fbi it could have been the cia basis could they justify surveilling you they sent you to prison for an abc and it's done it's all done i'm just gonna go have a pizza and And moreover, by this point, a congressional investigation has confirmed that you were
Starting point is 01:37:09 telling the truth. You're exactly right. And this is just, this is now on Wikipedia. But Barack Obama was still in the White House. And so the policy hadn't changed. I don't think he knew who I was one way or the other. I think that Brendan went to him and said, there's this very dangerous guy, insider threat from the CIA. He leaked to the press and Obama just said, vaya con Dios. He's a cold man. He doesn't care. No, he doesn't care. So part of the reason that this has to be precedent, they cannot allow a CIA officer to break ranks.
Starting point is 01:37:45 This is what's very dangerous. There actually was a legal precedent that was set in my case, and it was one of the things used against President Trump in the documents case. I was charged in the Eastern District of Virginia, which is called the espionage court, for a couple of reasons. No, I'm aware. Yeah. No national security defendant has ever won a case there. Ever.
Starting point is 01:38:09 And it's the home of the Pentagon, the CIA, all the defense contractors. So, we made a hundred motions to use a hundred classified documents that we received in discovery in my defense. And we asked the judge to block off three days to hear our motions. And we walked into the courtroom and she says, I'm going to make everybody's day much easier. And I'm going to just deny all 100 of these motions. You can't use any of these documents in the case. And my lawyer said,
Starting point is 01:38:46 your honor, it's our whole defense. You're saying that we can't mount a defense. And she said, classified is classified. So you can't use the classified documents to defend him. So as we were walking out, I said to my lawyer, what just happened? And he said, we just lost the case. That's what happened. And I said, well, now what happened and he said we just lost the case that's what happened and I said well now what do we do he said now we talk about a plea so the government charges you with a death penalty offense and then gets to decide what you can talk about in court in fact they made a list of words that I wasn't allowed to use in court like I could not use the word whistleblower I had to use the words swimming pool
Starting point is 01:39:25 there's a whole list swimming pool? because the word whistleblower in and of itself they deemed to be classified and so I couldn't say I'm a whistleblower on what grounds? they say so
Starting point is 01:39:40 so they invoked something called the SIPA the classified Classified Information Protection Act. So they would clear the courtroom every time I had a hearing. They would put plastic tarp over the windows and tape it up so nobody could shoot a laser beam at the window and listen to the vibrations and hear classified information. There was the list of banned words, like whistleblower. Wait. Yeah. Wh whistleblower. Wait. Yeah. Whistleblower.
Starting point is 01:40:08 Absurd. So, the physical security of the United States depended upon you not using the word whistleblower. Yeah. That was it. And so, my lawyer said to the judge, well, the judge said, his reason for blowing the whistle is irrelevant. The question is, does the intelligence community say that he violated the Espionage Act? The answer is yes. And my lawyer said, Your Honor, are you saying that a person can accidentally commit espionage? And she said, that's exactly what I'm saying.
Starting point is 01:40:46 Who is this judge? Her name was Liani Brinkema. She was a Clinton appointee. Was she not bright or was she just so committed to the status quo, to the intel community? Oh, she's committed. She reserves every national security case for herself. They're supposed to go into a wheel, right? And be chosen randomly.
Starting point is 01:41:06 She had Julian Assange. She had the Ed Snowden case, which never came. She had my case. She had Jeffrey Sterling, another CIA whistleblower. Every national security. She had Zacharias Moussaoui, the 20th hijacker. So she reserves these cases for herself and everybody gets the maximum. So she said in response to my attorney she sounds like
Starting point is 01:41:28 a scary person oh she was she was terrifying that the definition of whistle first she said i'm not respecting a precedent set in the federal district of maryland she's not respecting it in the tom drake case where the judge ruled that there had to be some harm to the national security. There was no harm in my case. Nobody was harmed, literally. The name that I confirmed was never made public. Never. So nobody was harmed. So she says the definition... And actually you were speaking out against harm. Yeah, I was speaking out against harm. She says the definition of espionage is providing national defense information to any person not entitled to receive it, period. That's espionage?
Starting point is 01:42:17 In her view. I mean, it may be illegal, but it's not. Espionage is spying. For a foreign country. Correct. Daniel Ellsberg called me. He and I became very close friends over this whole thing. And he said, I'm going to ask you to do something that's completely selfless. I'm going to ask you to go to trial because we can only challenge the constitutionality
Starting point is 01:42:42 of the Espionage Act if somebody goes to trial and is convicted. I said, Dan, I have five kids. I can't go to trial. So he asked Jeffrey Sterling to do it. Jeffrey did go to trial, was convicted. The judge saw that this conviction was kind of trumped up. And so he was convicted of nine felonies, including seven counts of espionage.
Starting point is 01:43:04 And to use her words, I'm giving you Kiriakou plus 12 months. That's what she said at sentencing. I'm giving you Kiriakou plus 12 months. Who is he alleged to have spied for? New York Times about the racial discrimination suit that he had filed against the CIA. They passed him over for a promotion just because he was black. And then they had the temerity to tell him, we're not promoting you because you're black. And he said, when did you realize I was black? The irony is that there's a lot of espionage in Washington. Apparently. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:48 Well, there is. Every intelligence service in the world has its officers in Washington. There are also people who work for the U.S. government who, without any kind of authorization, Sure. give highly relevant classified information to foreign governments. Yes. Yeah. Every day.
Starting point is 01:44:05 I know that for a fact, and I know people who've done it. And none of them is in jail. No. No, none of them. None of them is in jail. And it's also fair to say the U.S. government is penetrated by foreign actors. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 01:44:21 And it has been for a long time. Yes, I'm aware. And I don't think anyone goes to jail for that. No. Yes. And it has been for a long time. Yes, I'm aware. And I don't think anyone goes to jail for that. No. Right. You know, I tried a couple of times to get a pardon under Presidents Obama and Biden, thinking that most of my contacts in the Greek American community had access to those presidents. I was laughed out of the room under Obama, and I knew I would be.
Starting point is 01:44:49 Under Biden, there's a Greek Orthodox priest who very generously offered his access to the White House. Can I just note parenthetically, I don't think there are a lot of Greek liberals left. No, there aren't. There used to be. There used to be. They used to be lot of Greek liberals left. No, there aren't. There used to be. There used to be. They used to be almost all liberals. Yeah. And they've all moved. I've noticed. I don't think I've met a Greek liberal in a long time.
Starting point is 01:45:13 No. They're just not out there anymore. Yeah. So, he said, look, you know, I've known Biden since the early 70s. I can help you. And then nothing. And I called him and I said, father, forgive me for being so blunt, but maybe if I had been a crackhead relative of the president or a Chinese spy or a judge that sold children into bondage in Pennsylvania, maybe then I would have had a chance. But Joe Biden doesn't want to hear about a case like mine. And the truth is, and I mentioned this to you yesterday,
Starting point is 01:45:50 my support comes exclusively from the Republican Party, the libertarian movement, and the conservative movement. And I embrace it. That's just wild, though. Because they're the ones thinking about civil liberties now. They're the ones thinking about individual freedoms. You know, what's his name? Hakeem Jeffries the other day said,
Starting point is 01:46:16 Vladimir Putin is an avowed enemy of the United States. No, he's not. That's a neocon position. When did he take a vow? He said he was an avowed enemy. When did he take a vow that he was going to be an enemy of the United States?
Starting point is 01:46:32 No. Stop trying to lie us into a war or trick us into a war. But that's today's Democratic Party. Oh, I'm aware. It's, um, are you, do you think, I mean, the kind of casual cruelty and violence in the CIA that you describe, I haven't seen any meaningful attempt to stop it. Oh, no, no, no, no, I agree.
Starting point is 01:46:58 Very strongly. Do you believe that the CIA has hurt other American citizens? Yes. I'm sure of it. Yes. What about physically? Well, there are two very well-documented cases where Barack Obama used a drone to murder Anwar al-Awlaki. Yep.
Starting point is 01:47:19 And whether you like the man's politics or not, he was an American citizen who had never been charged with a crime. And then a week later, Obama droned his 16-year-old son and 14-year-old nephew who were sitting in a coffee shop having a cup of tea. Also, American citizens who had never been charged with a crime and they were children. So yeah, the CIA does all kinds of things like that. What about domestically? Well, you know, I keep thinking back to Eric Holder's testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee when Rand Paul asked him, does the president have the legal authority to murder an American on US soil. Well, Senator, you know, just answer the question. Say yes or no question. Yes, he has the authority. Now, has he done that? We didn't know. But the
Starting point is 01:48:16 Attorney General of the United States said that the president can murder an American citizen in the United States if the president believes that he presents a clear and present danger to the national security. That's sick. It's anti-constitutional. Not just unconstitutional. It's anti-constitutional. Do people who work at the CIA have a sense that maybe they're not serving good? Generally, no. Generally, these are, I mean, at the working level, these are hardworking, really smart, patriotic people. Some of them are really smart. I can confirm that. Really smart. At the upper levels, they believe they're the smartest people in the room they're smarter than whoever happens to be president at any given time and if they don't like this president yeah they just wait
Starting point is 01:49:10 him out he'll be gone in four years they'll still be there in their still senior positions and they're going to do exactly what they want to do you know this is why they panicked when ronald reagan named an outsider as the deputy director for operations. Remember? Do I remember? They lost it because they were like, oh my God. Okay, you appoint your campaign manager, the director. That's one thing.
Starting point is 01:49:36 But now operations, you're going to bring a friend from Wall Street or wherever he was. He was an attorney. Yeah. Yeah, I would. I think that's when they called in Bob Woodward to blow them up, right? The former Naval Intel officer, Bob Woodward. Oh, I would. for operations. I had just finished writing a cable. I had this lovely private office and it looked out past the secretary into the hallway. So I finished writing and I leaned back like this in my chair and I happened to be looking at the hall and Bob Woodward walked by. And I said to
Starting point is 01:50:16 the secretary, was that Bob Woodward that just walked by the office? And she said, yeah. And I said, without a security escort escort like he owns the place and she said you didn't see the memo i said what memo she said george uh george tenant she said george sent a memo saying that woodward's writing a book and we're all ordered to cooperate with i said i'm not talking to bob woodward i couldn't believe it he's just a great reporter. Come on, John. He's free to walk around. That's called shoe leather.
Starting point is 01:50:47 He's not. You're talking about people that have been undercover or deep cover for decades, and he's just walking the halls. He's not an instrument of the government. He's a counterbalance. He's a check against their overreach. Right. He's a journalist. They're going to run with that.
Starting point is 01:51:02 It's so absurd. I was shocked. What did you think of Bill Burns? I wrote an op-ed when Bill Burns was appointed. The former ambassador to Russia. Yes. And then up until January
Starting point is 01:51:18 the CIA director. I said that I disagreed with his position on Russia as I think every free-thinking American should. But we needed an outsider in that job. Having insiders is a mistake. You know, Obama proved that. Having insiders, Clinton proved that.
Starting point is 01:51:41 It's just a mistake. It's incestuous. And they feed on each other. So you needed an outsider. Bill Burns was one of the most highly respected ambassadors that we had in the State Department. Yes, that is true. And I called him the adult in the room, and I thought, you know, if we have to have a Washington insider in that position, he was a good choice. Yep. That sounds right from everything I know about him. When you worked there, did anyone ever talk about the murder of the president in 1963?
Starting point is 01:52:18 Yeah. Oliver Stone and I got into quite a spirited argument about this one time. Because I made the mistake of saying that I didn't think we had given enough thought to the possible involvement of Santo Traficante and the mob. And he said, oh, you're so full of shit, he says. And he just started yelling at me. I came to my own conclusion. I talked to Bobby Kennedy about this too. Actually, he's the one that pushed me over the edge and led me to this conclusion. I believe that elements of the CIA were responsible
Starting point is 01:53:00 for the assassination of the president. I don't agree when people say it was a CIA operation because John McCone was the head of the CIA and he was Bobby Kennedy's best friend. A name forgotten to history. That's right. And a good and decent man. But there were a lot of people,
Starting point is 01:53:21 unfortunately, one was a Greek-American, who- Very famously. Very famous Greek-American who- Very famously. Very famous Greek-American. His name does not bear repeating. Who hated John Kennedy for not providing air cover for the Bay of Pigs and wanted revenge against Kennedy. And these guys were still in constant touch with the Dulles brothers who were also just dark stains on American history. And so I came to the conclusion that, yeah, there were CIA officers who were responsible for carrying this thing. Did you think that when you worked there? No, I didn't. In fact, I thought it was so absurd. I couldn't believe people were even
Starting point is 01:54:00 talking about it. Really? Yeah. Yeah. It's like, we're the good guys. Why would we kill the president? I thought the same. Why haven't all the files been released? I genuinely don't know. For JFK, I think they have been.
Starting point is 01:54:19 No, they have not. They have not. No. That frightens me. You know, there were a couple of explosive revelations in the last tranche. The fact that James Angleton, the deputy director for counterintelligence, wanted to recruit, to formally recruit Lee Harvey Oswald is exactly the opposite of what the CIA has been telling us for so many years. Yes. For 60 years.
Starting point is 01:54:46 Why? If the Russians came to the conclusion that he was just a nut when he was living in Minsk and didn't want him to come back, why was the CIA involved or interested rather in recruiting him? What was he doing in Mexico City in October of 1963? He said, or not he said, but the CIA has said over the years
Starting point is 01:55:12 that he was there to go to the Cuban and Soviet embassies to try to get visas. Why was he meeting with Americans? And were those American CIA officers? Of course they were. Why else would he have gone to Mexico City? Yes. I'm actually more interested in the RFK and the MLK documents. There is so much
Starting point is 01:55:33 that we don't know about those two, especially RFK. They recovered one more bullet than Sir Hans Sir Hans's gun held. And Thomas Noguchi. And this is confirmed. Yes. And Thomas Noguchi. Well, then that's kind of case closed. There it is.
Starting point is 01:55:53 Right. I mean, we don't know what happened. We know the official explanation is untrue. It's untrue. Because it was a revolver. It was a.22 caliber revolver. Correct. It's like a nine shot.
Starting point is 01:56:03 That's right..22s fit a lot in the cylinder. I did not know that. Yeah. And Thomas Noguchi, the coroner, said that the death shot came from behind at an angle from down on the ground. But Sirhan was in front of him. Yes. There was a security guard there who was not associated with the Kennedy campaign or with the-
Starting point is 01:56:30 Ambassador Hotel. Yeah, the Ambassador Hotel named Caesar. He was a well-known racist and white supremacist. On video, you see him lifting a gun out of his belt and then you hear bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, bang. And he puts it back in the belt. He never got it fully out. In the 90s, the National Geographic Channel tracked him down to Mississippi or Alabama or something, and they interviewed him. And they said, did you shoot Robert Kennedy? And he said, no, I was going to, but that Arab fella got him
Starting point is 01:57:05 first. Well, we know that there had to be somebody else in the kitchen at the ambassador. We know that the shot came from behind. We know that there was a second gun because there were too many bullets. So why hasn't this been released? and and it raises the really obvious question which was i mean we know sir han had a gun yes fired the gun on yes film correct lots of people there including lots of famous people rosie greer and rosie greer yeah right so kennedy had just won the california primary johnson had announced a few months before that he's not running. Bobby Kennedy clearly is going to be the Democratic nominee. He's murdered that
Starting point is 01:57:50 night after his victory speech, walking through the kitchen of this now demolished hotel in Los Angeles. Sirhan Sirhan, a Christian Palestinian, from a very poor family, was arrested for it. His apartment is searched, and there are all kinds of papers where
Starting point is 01:58:06 he writes, RFK must die, RFK must die over and over again. He has said he's still alive, by the way. Oh yeah. And still in prison. Yes, he is. And I mean, that was before I was born and I'm 56. So it was quite some time ago. What was that? Well, that's the $64,000 question. Yes. Because now there are rumors that when he was at whatever it's called, Los Angeles Community College or whatever the community college there was, that he may have participated in experiments that fell under a CIA operation then known as MK ultra.
Starting point is 01:58:50 Yes. So what's the truth now? And director, director Helms during the Nixon administration or during, I guess it was the Ford administration ordered that the MK ultra documents be destroyed, which they were, which they were after Which they were.
Starting point is 01:59:06 After being specifically told it's a crime to destroy federal documents. And they don't belong to you. Right. Exactly. Do you think it's, and this is a debate about, you know, a lot of different people in Louis Berlin West and the CIA affiliated psychiatrist. Right. Do you think it is possible to get people to commit acts that they wouldn't otherwise commit? I do.
Starting point is 01:59:34 You do? I do. You said there are a lot of shrinks at CIA. Oh, my God. There are offices where everybody is either a psychiatrist or a psychologist. And they're operational psychiatrists and psychologists. So you take them with you on an operation to consult with them on how do you get this guy to crack? You want him to just lose his mind. What do I need to do to push
Starting point is 01:59:54 this guy over the edge? Right? Or what do I need to do to convince this guy to do something that he definitely doesn't want to do? I used those shrinks on operations. We even hypnotized one guy. He was hypnotized with his arm in the air for two hours. Never saw anything like it in my life. And then when he took him out of the hypnosis, his arm fell down. He looked around. He said, what happened? And then he vomited. I've never seen anything like it in my life. So, people- Did it work? It did work. We asked him, i'm getting a little off the subject but we asked him no this is definitely a subject a political assassination that had taken place
Starting point is 02:00:32 that he had claimed to see so the guy didn't speak any english so the the shrink is asking questions and i'm translating the questions as softly and as gently as I can. Into Arabic. Yes. And I'm asking, what did you see? Well, the guy had stopped at a mosque, at this little small roadside mosque to relieve himself. So, he's behind a tree and a car pulls up and it's these people who had been identified as the shooters in an assassination that had just taken place. And I said, so describe the guys. And he's describing what they're wearing. And I said, what kind of car are they driving? They're driving a van. I said, does the van have a license plate?
Starting point is 02:01:25 He said, yes. I said, can you see the license plate? And his eyes are closed. He goes like this. And then he reads off the numbers and letters to me. So I hand it to another officer that was in the room, runs into the next room, does a cable to the country intelligence service. It comes back, stolen plates. I said, my God, he actually did see the plates. The plates were stolen specifically for use in that assassination. Amazing. So you can convince people to do things that they otherwise would never dream mind control
Starting point is 02:02:08 is not a sci-fi fantasy no no MK ultra did far far more damage caused just grief and and misery to hundreds of people maybe more and there are subsets like MK Chickwit and there are like five or six other sub operations that were part of MKUltra that just, you know, cause people to jump out of windows and commit suicide, jump off bridges. Well, the defense secretary did. Yeah, he did.
Starting point is 02:02:42 James Forrestal. Yep. Committed suicide. Yes, he did. yeah he did james forestall yep committed suicide yes sure he did um yeah quite that's quite an amazing story i don't think that's on wikipedia no so um but i would encourage people to look into that because that is definitely worth knowing about um is it possible to infect people with cancer not while while I was there. People talked about it a lot. They talked about it a lot.
Starting point is 02:03:08 Yeah, like, do you think it's possible? Can we do it? I mean, you know, if we could do it, what would we do with it? This is something that the Venezuelan government and the Cuban government have both accused us of doing. Oh, yes. When I was there... And many governments around the world believe that that is real. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:25 Now, remember, I left 20 years ago. So, who knows? I don't know. Would you describe the CIA as an intelligence gathering agency? Not anymore. No. It used to be. The deputy director for whom I worked was very fond of saying, and he used to say this all the time, the job of the CIA is to recruit spies, to steal secrets, and to analyze those secrets so that our policymakers can make the best informed policy.
Starting point is 02:03:55 Okay, so I thought that was the whole idea behind creating the agency right there. Yes, that was it until 9-11. And then it became a paramilitary organization. you know, science stuff. Satellites and drones and, you know, computer intrusions and stuff like that. They're not really in the business anymore of recruiting spies to steal secrets. They should be, but they're not. It's not directly related, but we know because it's public information that somebody bet big against United Airlines and American Airlines right before 9-11. So people knew it was coming.
Starting point is 02:04:51 Now, the people who planned it knew it was coming. Yes. Do you think that those bets, those stock bets shorting those airlines, that Al-Qaeda did that? No, I don't think Al-Qaeda did it. I think that... In other words, who else knew it was coming? I think there were intelligence services out there, foreign intelligence services, that knew it was coming, but it was in their interests for the U.S. to be at war. I think that's where this came from. Did you think that when you worked there? No.
Starting point is 02:05:29 And I'll tell you why. On July 6th, 2001, totally normal day, I was entertaining a group of Middle Eastern intelligence officers, which we did every day. They come in, we do a day of briefings, we exchange gifts, they get a photo op with the director and then we take them out to a this is at langley yes at langley so i had this group of of arabs that day and i had gone to this very young junior analyst on al-qaeda at the uh counterterrorism center and i said hey, hey, I've got this delegation. Can you come in and give us 30 minutes on al-Qaeda? He said, sure. So, it comes time for the briefing. And instead of this junior analyst showing up, Kofor Black shows up with the chief of operations.
Starting point is 02:06:15 And who's Kofor Black? Kofor Black was the director of the CIA's counterterrorism center, later ambassador Kofor Black. He was the special coordinator for counterterrorism at the State Department. Then he went on to Blackwater and great wealth. So, I jumped up and I said, oh, I said, gentlemen, this is Kofor Black. He's the director of the Counterterrorism Center, and this is the chief of operations for the Osama bin Laden group called Alec Station. And I mean, I had no idea why somebody as important and as busy as Kofor would come in. He sits down and he says, he starts off by saying, something terrible is going to happen. We don't know exactly when or where, but we're hearing communications from Al-Qaeda
Starting point is 02:07:01 that tell us that something big that we've never seen before is going to happen. We're hearing code words for a huge attack. The honey salesman is coming with vast quantities of honey. There's going to be an enormous wedding. There's going to be a great football match. We're hearing Al-Qaeda camp commanders on the phone with their students and they're crying and saying, I'll see you in paradise. He said, we have no idea when and where this attack is going to come. He said, I'm begging you, if you have any sources inside Al-Qaeda, please help us. And they just kind of sat there and looked at each other and he got up and he shook their hands and walked out. So at the end of the day, I'm thinking about this all day. At the end of the
Starting point is 02:07:50 day, I send them back to their hotel. I said, I'll pick you up at the hotel. I'll take you to dinner. But I went back to Kofra's office and I said, Kofra, I wanted to thank you for coming and talking to those guys, but I have to ask, were you serious or was that for their benefit? And he said, oh, I'm dead serious. Something terrible is going to happen. And then it happened. On the morning of September 11th, Kofra and I had a meeting scheduled with Condoleezza Rice for the stupidest idea now in retrospect the government printing office was going to print a volume of declassified cables called foreign policy of the united states 1949 to 1967 greece turkey cyprus nobody's ever going to read this thing right not not one person. Even the Cypriots will ignore it. Not interested.
Starting point is 02:08:45 Right. But it mentioned three people who were still alive who had been informants for the CIA. And the law says that if they are outed, we have to offer them resettlement. So, rather than go through that whole rigmarole, we made an appointment with Condi to ask her. National Security Advisor. National Security Advisor. Thank you. To just remove those three cables. Nobody's going to miss them because nobody's ever going to read this book.
Starting point is 02:09:12 But just in case. So I walked over to Kofor's office to tell him that our car was ready. And his secretary. So you were at Langley that morning early. I was. I was there early. And his secretary had a small TV on her desk. You couldn't watch TV on your computer in those days. And I said, what happened to the
Starting point is 02:09:32 World Trade Center? And she said, a plane flew into it. And because I'm an idiot sometimes, I said, you know what? That happened once before. In the 1930s, a plane flew into the Empire State Building, but it was really foggy and raining that day. It's so crystal clear today. How can you not see that you're flying into the World Trade Center? And then the second plane hit. And she turned to me and she said, did you see that or did I imagine it? And I ran back to my office. I said, guys, we're under attack. Two planes just hit both towers of the World Trade Center. We all ran up to the front where Kofor's office was.
Starting point is 02:10:10 And you have to imagine this big bullpen where there are maybe 150 or 200 people in partitioned cubbies. And then there are private offices all around the perimeter. And then there are TVs hanging from the ceiling above Kofor's office on BBC, CNN the director's office and tell him this you go to security you go to operations and the rest of us like what do you want us to do evacuate nobody's evacuating literally not a single person evacuated finally the the CIA cops came in and said if you don don't evacuate, you'll be arrested. So we evacuated. I got about halfway home, had to abandon my car. So I started walking. Why?
Starting point is 02:11:13 It was gridlock, like World War Z, like the end of the world, you know? I mean, on the George Washington Parkway, which is four lanes, it's like 12 cars wide and everybody's just parked. That parkway passes right by the Pentagon. And that's right, right by the Pentagon. When I got to the Teddy Roosevelt Bridge, I lived just up from the Teddy Roosevelt Bridge, I saw the deputy national security advisor with no shoes evacuating. And I said to this guy next to me, how could this happen? That's the national, the deputy national security advisor. He ran out of the white house without shoes to save himself. I ended up, my, my, my ex-wife and I, we climbed to the roof of my building. We were engaged at
Starting point is 02:12:09 the time and we watched the Pentagon burn for a little while. And finally I said, this is ridiculous. We have to get back to work. And so I walked back to my car, drove across the median, went back to CIA and stayed there for the next four days. I just slept under the desk hour, two hours at a time. And your fiance also worked at CIA? Mm-hmm. She did the same thing. I mean, and then the world changed and your life in particular changed.
Starting point is 02:12:34 I could never, ever have predicted the changes either for me personally or for the CIA in the country. So you didn't think as one of the only Arabic speakers at the counterterrorism center at CIA in the country. So you didn't think as one of the only Arabic speakers at the counterterrorism center at CIA in Langley, of course, you knew you would play a significant role in what came next. I expected that. And you did, but you never expected you'd go to prison. Never. Not in a thousand years would I have said, I'll do the prison experience for a little while, see how that works out. So I just want to ask you one last question
Starting point is 02:13:05 of all the things you've said which I've known you for a while but I'm and we just had dinner last night but I'm I'm shocked by some of the things that you have said actually
Starting point is 02:13:14 and I grew up around this stuff and I'm still shocked right so the story that you told about the fake Japanese diplomat trying to set you up is remarkable.
Starting point is 02:13:27 That's a remarkable story. Sick. It is sick. It's unbelievable that they would do that to an American citizen, particularly one with a demonstrated record of serving the country at personal risk. So, but outrage aside, it does sort of reframe your understanding of how things actually work that happened to you. That's a real thing. Yes. Provable. And you said that it had in fact changed your view of how things actually worked and you'd reassessed your understanding of things that had happened in American history and then maybe they're not exactly what they seem to be. That's right.
Starting point is 02:13:59 Can you go into a little more depth about what you're thinking now? The short version is I have come to believe very strongly that Ronald Reagan was right when he said that government is the problem. It's not the solution to the problem. He was right. He recognized it and the rest of us failed to see it. So now when I hear about standoffs, let's say, between American citizens and the Bureau of Land Management, for example, or ATF or DEA, I no longer believe what is reported in the media. I no longer believe the strategic leaks that come from whatever bureau or agency to spin the story. I've gotten to the point where I'm obsessed with doing my own investigations. And I read all source material because the truth has to be out there somewhere. I just feel like I have to put it together for myself.
Starting point is 02:15:08 So now when we talk about the Kennedy assassinations or RFK, I mean, or MLK, or as we said earlier, Ruby Ridge or Waco, whatever it is, I default to doubting the government account. So you worked for the government during Waco. That was my first day working at a newspaper. So I remember the chaos in the newsroom when that happened. So that was 93? That must have been the spring of 93, correct? Is that right? Yes. So boy, over 30 years ago. But you worked been the spring of 93, correct? Is that right? Yes. So, boy, over 30 years ago.
Starting point is 02:15:47 But you worked for the government then. I was at the CIA at the time, and it was on every TV in the CIA. And I remember looking at it, not really having an opinion, and my boss saying, well, it's about time they finally moved on that operation. So, what was that? Boy, that's really a forgotten moment in American history. So there was a religious sect known as the Branch Davidians, or that's what we called them. That's right. A guy called David Koresh, that was his cult name anyway. And they were
Starting point is 02:16:16 accused of mistreating children. Yes. Which maybe they were, I have no idea. Hoarding weapons. And hoarding, of course, and hoarding weapons. And they were surrounded by federal agents at their compound in Waco, Texas. And that standoff culminated in a shootout in which federal agents were killed. Yes. And most of the occupants of that compound were burned to death.
Starting point is 02:16:38 It was something like 27 of them. And half of them were children. Yeah. Like young children. Yeah, I think it was maybe more than children yeah like young children yeah i think it was maybe more than 27 more than 27 yeah it was it was a lot it was awful but what was it was that more than what we were told it was do you think i well the spin was this was a dangerous lunatic and he had to be stopped before he used those guns to go out and kill people the truth of the matter is you're allowed to buy as many guns as you want.
Starting point is 02:17:08 I've proven that, yeah. I have. Good. You're not allowed to buy guns because you're a convicted felon. I'm a convicted felon. And you've done nothing wrong, and I really hope you receive that presidential pardon soon. Thank you. And on top of losing my gun, I lost my pension.
Starting point is 02:17:24 The Obama Justice Department seized my federal pension why 20 years of proud service 770 000 i'm gonna have to work until the day i die only a pardon how could you have worked at cia for all those years and not wind up rich yeah right i have to say that is the story that no one ever tells. And I just know it from my personal life, just living in DC my whole life. They're all rich. Have you noticed this? They are all rich. How, why are there all these former CIA officers who are rich? Some of them, excuse me, some them um get enormous book advances others make this odd transition into venture capital or consulting or butts in the seats kind of uh you know booze
Starting point is 02:18:16 allen style firms um a lot of them go overseas and stay overseas so the cia pays for everything the only thing you pay for is your phone bill and they just invest invest invest for 30 years and come out with plenty of money i've lived in nice neighborhoods for a long time um and they're always cia people on my always half of mclean virginia is cia Yeah, and the District of Columbia in Florida. And it's just like legit rich. Yeah, rich. That's not a good sign, is it? No, it's not a good sign.
Starting point is 02:18:54 Because you're not supposed to capitalize on a position. Not when you have the power of life and death over people. That's what bothers me. It's not just like people from the Labor Department or Commerce who are like leveraging their skills to riches. It's like people who have information that they're the only ones legally allowed to possess. The true inside information and the power to kill people. That's right.
Starting point is 02:19:17 That's one category. With no questions asked. May I add one thing? Yeah. I recently received an email from someone I'd never heard of, but this is the third such email that I have received and I wanted to mention it. So, of all things, I received it through eBay, right? I was selling something on eBay and somebody saw that, because I'm an open book, so I'm just like John Kiriakou on eBay. So I received this thing through eBay and it says, dear John, it's so nice to finally speak to you. I've been watching your
Starting point is 02:20:01 YouTube videos and I love all the content and I've been wanting to reach out to you for many years. I'm one of the FBI agents who wants to personally apologize to you for the disgraceful way that the FBI and our federal government treated you. I worked on your case with both headquarters and the Washington field office team and I know many of the personnel that you're familiar with, unfortunately. That case was directed and driven by senior most officials. Many mid-level and street personnel were against it, but nevertheless, we just followed orders. Anyway, I've always felt bad about what we did to you and for the way you and your family were treated, and I want to personally apologize. Well, God bless that man. Do you think that's real?
Starting point is 02:20:41 Yeah. Yep. Two other FBI agents sent similar emails to my attorneys. They're sorry. They did as they were told. And it's nice, but... Do you worry about anything further happening to you? I did for a long time, yes. There were people inside the Justice Department with whom I was friendly who said,
Starting point is 02:21:05 ooh, the CIA is really mad that you only did 23 months. Like they really wanted you to die in there. So be on your best behavior because they're watching everything you do. And then that wore off about two years out of prison. I didn't see the surveillance anymore. Never got any funny emails As soon as I got home I was home for a couple of days from prison
Starting point is 02:21:29 And I got an email from a guy who claimed to be an attorney Saying he had some classified information that showed a crime And he wanted to send it to me And I said don't you dare I don't want any classified information Call the FBI and give it to them But I figured it's just some nut trying to set me up So anytime I had a question I would just call the FBI and give it to them. But I figured it's just some nut trying to set me up. So anytime I had a question,
Starting point is 02:21:49 I would just call the lawyers, refer people to the lawyers, and then it ended up just going away after a while. So the story that you just told over the last couple of hours is very distressing to hear as someone who grew up in this country, believes in the country, loves the country. I can't even imagine what it must be like to be you,
Starting point is 02:22:08 and yet you tell it complete without bitterness and no self-pity whatsoever. How have you been able to maintain emotional equilibrium, wisdom, perspective, and peace in the middle of everything you've been through? Thank you for asking that. When I was in prison, I read constantly, including biographies of Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela. And I thought, wow,
Starting point is 02:22:34 what these guys went through, and they just forgave over and over. Like Nelson Mandela, especially, the way he was treated and kept in solitary confinement on Robben Island, and he forgave. And then there was a biography of a 20th century Greek Orthodox saint called Saint Nektarios, Nektarios of Aegina. And he had been the Greek Orthodox bishop of Alexandria, Egypt, and other priests who were jealous of his rapid rise accused him of having an affair with a nun. And so he was stripped of his office. He never attained high office again, but he forgave everybody for what they had done to him. And he hadn't done it. No, he hadn't done anything. And I thought, you know what? These people went through so much more than I did. It was so much worse for them. And I've become friendly with one of the
Starting point is 02:23:29 former prisoners at Guantanamo, Mohamedou Oudslahi. The CIA kidnapped Mohamedou from Mauritania while he was attending his cousin's wedding. We tortured him mercilessly for 14 years. 14 years? And then we decided, eh, wrong guy. Let him go. Actually? Yeah, which happens with more frequency than you might think. And so when he got out, he went onto Twitter and I tweeted at him and I said, Mohamedou,
Starting point is 02:24:02 you don't know me, but my government will never apologize for what it did to you. So I want to apologize. I am so sorry for what happened over the last 14 years. And his attorney called me and said, would you be interested in a conversation? I said, absolutely. We've been friends ever since. He actually lectures to my grad school class at the University of Salamanca. He comes on Zoom. The poor guy couldn't go back to Mauritania. He was afraid they'd kill him. No country wanted him because he had been in Guantanamo for 14 years. Finally, the Dutch said, we'll give you citizenship. And so, he has gotten married, he has children, he got an education, living happily ever after in the Netherlands. And zero bitterness.
Starting point is 02:24:51 And I said to him one day, he said to me in front of my class what you just said, you're not bitter at all for what happened. And I said, me? I said, you, you're like Mandela. How can you not be bitter after what we did to you 14 years? I was 23 months. And he said, what would bitterness accomplish? Nothing. He said, bitterness would put me right back into that cage. And I don't want to live in there. So that's the position that I've come to take. There's a very, that's a rational explanation of it, and I think it makes total sense. I think it's true, but forgiving people is kind of the next step, which you've also done,
Starting point is 02:25:35 and what's the purpose of that? I've forgiven for myself. I'm sure that John Brennan doesn't give two shits if John Kiriakou forgives him, but I feel better having that monkey off my back. So I did it for myself. I don't care what John Brennan's feelings are. And John Brennan, as you described as a grudge holder, is the opposite. Oh yes, he is. And a prisoner of that. Yes. John, I really appreciate all the time that you've taken to tell your story today and giving me the opportunity and i hope that you are vindicated in the thank you to the fullest extent thank you very very much engine
Starting point is 02:26:16 back thank you uh truth telling should be rewarded it should You know, like I said, I'm very, very fortunate, blessed to have the support of people like you and Dr. Phil and Bruce Fine and Brett Tolman and Doug Deason and people who understand the import, not just to me, but the import to all Americans of protecting our civil liberties from a government out of control. We have to make sure that we never go back there. You have to reward the truth and punish lies. And if you invert that, then it's a system you can't live under.
Starting point is 02:26:54 That's right. Because it's evil. It is. It's evil. John, thank you. Thank you. Very much. We want to thank you for watching us on Spotify, a company that we use every day.
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