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Ex-CIA Spy: China Is Preparing & We're Not Paying Attention! Here's What Happens If They Takeover!

November 28, 2024 / 02:15:44

This episode features former CIA officer Mike Baker discussing geopolitical threats, intelligence, and the parallels between espionage and business. Key topics include Russia's actions in Ukraine, China's ambitions regarding Taiwan, and Iran's influence in the Middle East.

Baker shares insights from his career at the CIA, emphasizing the importance of intelligence in decision-making. He explains how skills from espionage, such as understanding human psychology and manipulation, can be applied in business contexts.

The conversation also touches on the current political climate in the U.S., particularly regarding Trump's presidency and its implications for international relations. Baker expresses concerns about the normalization of nuclear threats and the potential for future conflicts.

Throughout the episode, Baker highlights the necessity of being informed and understanding the motivations behind global events. He encourages listeners to recognize the complexities of international politics and the importance of strategic decision-making.

Listeners gain a deeper understanding of the interconnectedness of global issues and the role of intelligence in navigating them.

TL;DR

Mike Baker discusses geopolitical threats, intelligence skills, and the parallels between espionage and business in today's political climate.

Video

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China is at war with the West already we just don't see it and when I look at a map like this I see a lot of problems
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here is one issue over there Putin is threatening nuclear weapons and then this regime has been engaged in
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assassination plots on the president elect and then over here this is looming right as a major issue who's the real
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enemy of the West in your opinion I've talked to a number of experts and their take is is that how do you think this
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ends um EX CIA officer Mike Baker spent
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decades in the field mastering the Spy skills you need to achieve success in business and everyday life and offers
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unique insights into the looming geopolitical threats that's facing the West when you left the CIA you start
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being a spy for companies why because in its core the cia's responsibility is to get intelligence because without that
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you cannot make smart strategic decisions and if you can sell the idea to somebody that they should commit
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treason on their country and betray their family to gather intelligence and Protect US National Security interests
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then that's an incredible skill to use in selling in business and there's a lot of ways you can do this people are
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capable of it more so than they realize but there's a lot of similarities between what I used to do in the Spy
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world and what you do in business there's targeting manipulation psychology of how people think
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identifying weaknesses and leverage how they close the deal the most important thing I took away was what I referred to
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as getting off the X and that's how you get companies to stay with you for 20 years let's go through all of them first
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of all you start with this has always blown my mind a little bit 53% of you that listen to the show
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regularly haven't yet subscribed to the show so could I ask you for a favor before we start if you like the show and
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much [Music]
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Mike who are you and give me a couple of sentences on the Journey
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of your career and what it's exposed you to I'm a a dude who's been very fortunate in life um I started with the
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CIA uh at an early age not necessarily expecting to start with the CIA and the
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operations directorate and you you joined the CIA at 22 years old yeah basically um early ' 80s beginning
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of the 80s what was your how did you sort of encapsulate your mission into a couple of sentences during that
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time this is going to sound really weird to do whatever I was instructed to do
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um to further um the mission objectives so and what I mean by that is that's not
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just me or another officer or somebody else in there that's their job so the
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CIA doesn't set priorities it doesn't set Set uh tasking right that's done by
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the White House um and those in the White House in the government at the time the administration at the time for
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setting the priorities tasking and that's in part obviously Guided by
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intelligence provided by the intelligence community so it's it's a symbiotic relationship but the tasking
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comes into the agency and the agency says Fine get on with it and that could be collection of Intelligence on a
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particular subject and so you could be talking about we need to know what uh
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Putin's plans and intentions are we need to know what's the uh breakout time for
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the Iranian regime to actually uh reach uh weapons capability for the nuclear
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program whatever the tasking is right it comes into the agency the agency then fine let's get busy with it and there's
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other elements of the Intel Community all working very hard to accomplish that same thing so it could be the NSA is
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also working on that it could be military Ence is also working on that there's there's a lot of moving Parts
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but uh my part was was at the agency so did you have to spend a lot of time overseas and if so if you were overseas
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what were you doing overseas yeah uh I spent uh my entire time um I never had a
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what you would call a headquarters tour so I spent all my time overseas traveling what was your day-to-day like
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because it's just it's just a world so far away from anything that I know so I'm like you spend all that time in the CIA overseas when you wake up in the
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morning are you are you undercover because if you're in a foreign country presumably they don't know that you're part of the CIA well no we have
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different types of of operations and different types of things I mean so you can you could end up living in a in a
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foreign country for two or three years right you got a home there and you're you know you're working there and and um
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other times it could be a short one-off operation where you're just dropping in to do something in particular maybe to
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meet an asset or whatever it might be what's an asset an asset is a is a source uh is a recruited source so um
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that's a good point there's there's misconception sometimes in vocabulary right so they'll say CIA agent well in
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reality it's a CIA officer the agent is the person that's been recruited or the asset um the the human source and so
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that's and that's a that's a in incredible skill right to be able to go
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out you have to you have to identify first of all you start with what's what's the information you're looking for and that's the fascinating thing
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this it turns out that what I used to do and what we do in in my business which is you know intelligence and
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investigations um Security Services is pretty much the same thing what
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information does the client in the cia's case that's the US government what information does the client need uh
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where does it reside who has access to it and how can you you get a hold of it
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appropriately right so how can you get that information you identify the target then
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you figure out you know what you need to do to uh develop potentially a relationship you develop that
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relationship then you if you're fortunate enough you recruit that asset that person could be a deputy foreign
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minister could be a senior military officer could be could be a cab driver
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you know who uh can tell you everything that's happening in a particular neighborhood of Interest whatever it might be um but that process of that
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that recruitment cycle um of the spotting you know targeting development
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recruitment running then you've got to maintain that relationship and the interesting thing
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is um often times particularly when you're talking about a really a really important asset someone
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who's in a position of access um maybe because they've risen up through their own government
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right that that window from the minute you get them on board you set the hook
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you get them recruited and they start reporting taking tasking that window starts to
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close and there's a clock that that's ticking because usually that's a it can
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be a corrosive thing on on a person's in you know character right on on on their on their their being right so you
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recruit a you recruit a Russian right um you're you're always in the back of your
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mind thinking okay you you know how long do we have here right before because it
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it's unless they're a psychotic right then then they don't care they don't give a [ __ ] they they'll be happy to to
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to do this but it's not a normal thing right so to be able to convince somebody
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to sell the idea to somebody that they should uh they should um essentially
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commit treason on their country right um
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is is a remarkable thing I've always felt anyway so then when I went into
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business you know the idea of of business development of selling seemed like sure that's that's an easy lift
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right because yeah that's anyway I'm disappearing down a rabbit hole no you're not I mean this is exactly the rabbit hole that I wanted to go down
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because I mean this is the D so I do want to understand how you think about selling because that seems like the
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hardest thing to sell to get you know potentially a Russian to commit treason against their country I'm thinking God what what are you offering them in in
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terms of an incentive um so would would your job in that be to convince them or would it be
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to go and meet them to collect the information or would it be something else could be all of those be all of
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those and then part of it depends on where what location I mean sometimes you have you have difficult places obviously
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it's more difficult to work in in um a challenging environment like um pick a
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place I mean right now current conf think about working in Lebanon right if
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you're developing or working with a source I don't there's not a lot of potential recruits forah right now they
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don't even though there's Headroom they don't I don't don't think there's a lot of willing people wanting to take some of those jobs but but the point being is
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is uh that um you could end up doing all of those things you might have spotted
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somebody you might develop them you might recruit them right and you're going to handle them for a while uh maybe then you're going to head off
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someplace else and someone else is going to come in and take over that relationship that's also a crucial point right because you know if you've
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developed a a a personal relationship with somebody uh to the point where
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they're going yeah I guess I can't do that I can't provide you with Intelligence on this or that right
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because think about they're not just betraying they're not betraying their country I've always thought about this
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uh particularly when we're talking about Traders here uh in the states right we
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you you know edley Howard Jim Nicholson right um who are these people Hansen
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these are all traders to the US so um moles whatever you want to call them
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within the uh agency Hansen was a at the FBI one of the most destructive Traders
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we ever had but what did he do um he interestingly enough um was a longtime
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FBI agent who um he was responsible for uh Counter
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Intelligence to some degree uh for a big degree uh related to the former Soviet
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Union and Russia um and so he had a tremendous amount of knowledge about how
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the Russian service worked right and then eventually he ended up uh allowing
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he wasn't even recruited he offered his services but he offered him in such a way because he understood how they
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worked that he was able to do it without the Russians knowing who he was right so it was a
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very remote relationship and he trolled it which is fascinating which allowed him to then do this for a very long
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period of time and and betray a number of of uh of of our Russian assets and
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those people didn't have a happy ending and so uh but the the idea is that you
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look at those people or you look at anybody who does that right they're not just portraying their country they're betraying their their service they're
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betraying their family all all these things because it's a it's a fascinating psychology and if you don't think about
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that if you don't understand that then I think it's hard to to close the deal with anybody um what is that deal so in
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the case of the gentleman you mentioned who was a traitor to the US is he getting paid is it money that they're
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doing it was he was getting paid he had some issues he was he was kind of a quirky individual he was spending a lot
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of money on a mistress or someone who you imagined to be his mistress and um
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motivation can be a difficult thing right sometimes and sometimes it's a very straightforward thing it's usually
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not ideology interesting yeah I know that that I had the same thought when
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when I first started and and they kind of went through this process of saying what are motivations well money is a big
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one so you've got you know and then ideology not so much uh sometimes it
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could be something as simple as they've got a sick kid they can't get treatment for the kid in whatever country they
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happen to reside in sometimes it's it's it's more based than that just
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they they don't feel like they got enough hugs from their employer or they feel disrespected by their their their
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their their government or whatever you you have to be able to identify those weaknesses and then you have to be willing to to play on them frankly and
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so on the point of identification if you met me and I was an asset is that that's
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the word right um you would be I mean you know if we had just met yeah you would you would be a potential a
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potential Source Target uh velopmental okay so I've got I'm a cab driver and I
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drive a high ranking official and every day in the car he's telling me everything that's going on he's just offloading so you want to recruit me
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right yeah so how' you go about recruiting me well theoretically it's it's just going to be I'm going to find
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something that you're interested in how and then I'm going to be a conversation it's as simple as that so you might get in my cab one day yeah and then I'll
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I'll just get in your cab and we'll start talking and people love this you I mean you're
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probably on planes as much as I am um people love to talk right and they love
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to talk about themselves right so if you get if if you just ask questions right
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if that's all you do you don't have to say anything about yourself right I don't know how many thousands of conversations I've had where you know
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someone says so what are you doing I said just you know I'll give them some [ __ ] I mean not now but and as soon
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as you give them something that doesn't sound interesting then fine now you got a A Runway then
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you just turn it on onto them and say so what do you do people want to talk about themselves it's it's it's striking
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sometimes and I mean we find this all the time and it's just information gathering right like if we if we have a
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client and they say uh we've got a a business
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in pickup Place let's just just for grins let's say China we've got an
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investment that we've made in China but it doesn't it's not sense right we're not seeing what we thought we were going
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to see from the revenues or from the the the production whatever what's going on well if we have someone Rock up at that
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factory or that manufacturing facility or whatever and outside there outside
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the factory is just rows of of noodle shops or whatever you know food trucks or whatever you want to call but there's
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a maybe there's a security guard or you know some people just sitting around they love to talk right because they've
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got nothing else going on in their day right and so the information you can get from people whether it's a security
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guard sitting in a booth all day long who's suddenly going to tell you well no the plant is only up and operating Mondays Wednesdays and Fridays or you
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know this is this is the number of trucks that are coming out you know little benign stuff that that no one's going to think anything of the amount of
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information you can gather from people um maybe it's someone who's working as a cleaner in a building maybe it's a cab
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driver it doesn't matter um you know it's it's a secretary in a business right you're you're looking for people
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with access who um they're just going to be inclined to talk right it it sounds
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odd sometimes but you get that conversation going you find things that the person's interested in then you start mirroring that perhaps maybe that
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oh you know I'm interested in that too maybe I'm not maybe I find it boring as hell there was one where it was like chess I was like God damn I hate chess
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but but the guy was really into chess right and uh it was overseas and and uh
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we were drinking and bumped into him at the bar and and uh you know we started talking and turns out that his his
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passion was chess suddenly my passion is chess problem is you got to demonstrate
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that right and I sucked at it so so it was a quick a quick uh crash course in
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how to at least make myself look somewhat reasonable um but then and then you're just looking for other points of
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of of of access and and what that turns into is points of
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Leverage so that sounds you know if once you take it further enough down the the
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the the walk it can sound very mercenary right and it is you're talking about
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again asking people to do something that's not necessarily in their best interests but you're doing it for a very
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stated purpose now again a lot of people will listen to this and go that's just [ __ ] you're just doing it for the man right you're doing it for the the
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government and okay well you know what nations that are hostile to us interests
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or UK's interests or Australia's interest or Canada's interest or Europe's interest they're doing this all
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the time and they're doing it a lot more aggressively and with no guard rails about how they behave right
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so yeah yeah so I'm that cab driver I've started off loading to because you've got me talking you've told me your you
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know you've said your career is not interesting I start talking at what point do you
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seek out that leverage so at some point you're looking for him to maybe say his son's sick or something right well I mean yeah something along those lines or
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you're just looking for you're looking for um you're building a profile of the
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person's personality right so you're trying to understand what's important to them you're trying to understand what drives them you're trying to understand
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where their problems are you know uh you're trying to understand if they have any grievances you're looking for you're
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really just building a a a a map of what this P person is like you're not going to get that in one taxi ride oh no no no
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not at all not at all so what do you want to do you want to you want to have a you want to have a reason to uh uh
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meet up again right you're always looking in simple terms you know you get that first encounter what do you want
00:18:12
well you want a second encounter so you got to find some reason for that now sometimes it's easier than other times
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right like so you know you can't uh uh you know you can't always get that but
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that's what you're looking for another reason to meet back up with that individual seemingly just for no reason
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it just happens right or or uh I mean it's like this morning I got
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in a car right um was an Uber and at the end of the the uh the
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drive the guy gives me his card says uh hey you know if if you ever need a ride
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whatever um you know I've got a couple of cars and so I you know this is kind of what I do plus I do the draw Uber I
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like that as well um and so now yeah fine I can give
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him a call back right and and I've done that overseas in cases where I've said look I you know I need to know that I
00:19:04
can get from point A to point B tomorrow can I just call you rather than hope that I catch a cab there's a lot of ways
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you can do this it's not it's not rocket science you know but it can be
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um it can be uh difficult when you're talking about a high value Target yeah
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yeah yeah cab driver is probably a little bit more straightforward because there's a clear reason why you'd frequent the the Pres but maybe the head
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of the Iranian nuclear program might be a little bit more complicated to although that would be good too um
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yeah so your training they they they find you at 22 years old I hear what do
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they train you to be good at there's everything from um tradecraft which is a
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key part of it and tradecraft encompasses a lot of things right it's it's how do you conduct yourself
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overseas how do you do clandestine Communications um how' you go cover how
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do you go undercover um use of Disguise uh there's surveillance counter
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surveillance uh there's there's a lot to when I just say tradecraft what that
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involves um and then there's other training there's paramilitary training
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and and other things that you do what about people skills what are the people skills they try and teach you there's a
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lot of talking about um um the psychology of the recruitment process uh
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which means you're diving into you know profiling individuals the psychology of of how people think um what that process
00:20:40
does to an individual I mean and and there's um it's interesting I mean
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there's there's there's some folks who who I think struggled with that more than others and I think the idea of of
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of of getting people to that point of recruiting people I think some folks I
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think found it uh difficult maybe problematic right because of of
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the manipulation involved um you know I I I didn't I again not
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necessarily being a deep thinker I didn't sit a lot of the time you know at home angst ridden over you know whether
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I was being manipulative or not I was just I have a task I'm going to do the task and and and then move on but um the
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training can take quite a while can a couple of years uh before they feel like
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you're ready to to go out so you eventually leave the
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CIA um after a very very long career there why did you
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leave my daughter was young and um uh I
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was in the process of uh of getting a divorce uh which took a while my ex-wife
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great person but not compatible by the end I think I my career was a little
00:22:01
difficult um and so I needed to do something that kept
00:22:06
me closer to home you started doing corporate Espionage
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thereafter we call it we call it strategic intelligence and investigations okay so for someone that
00:22:18
doesn't know what strategic intelligence and investigations corporate Espionage is it's effectively being a spy for
00:22:24
companies it could be there could be an element of that yes I'm not gonna I'm not going to deny that look it's it
00:22:31
there are corporations out there that are very aggressive in understanding what other companies are doing right in
00:22:36
particular um but what we got started in
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um was primarily a company will come to you and say we're making an investment
00:22:49
in a country we've never operated in before pick a country um tell us everything we need to know what what are
00:22:56
the problems what are the risks what are the threats what are you know how do you assess that uh it could be we've had a
00:23:01
fraud we've had a and and and now we've had theft of intellectual property we need to know how bad it is um it could
00:23:08
be we're doing a joint venture and we just need to know about who we're investing in right you never know it
00:23:14
could be that they're saying look we're we're not having any success in maybe
00:23:20
they're in the mining sector we're not having any success in Africa where we're trying to pick up these licenses and yet these other companies are picking them
00:23:26
up left and right what are we doing wrong what are they doing right who are
00:23:31
they dealing with so now we're getting closer to what you referred to as corporate Espionage
00:23:38
um but you have to because you're not working for a government you know the
00:23:45
the guard rails have now shrunk right in terms of what you can do and so you have to know what is uh legally appropriate
00:23:53
in each jurisdiction and that changes right what you can do over here is different than what you could do in the UK or in France or in the US or whatever
00:24:00
so as long as you know what the parameters are um then you you you do
00:24:05
that right to gather information that's going to benefit the client did you have to go undercover terms of physical
00:24:12
disguises yeah yeah on on occasion which was great yeah I mean if you like if you I I love the acting part of it right
00:24:18
because you you'd be you'd be I would get completely absorbed in it right and
00:24:24
then uh and I I loved it so I I didn't have a problem sometimes people don't enjoy it or they don't it's it's not if
00:24:31
you if you're not confident if you don't have if you're put on a disguise whether it's a full overhead mask or whether
00:24:37
it's just you know disguised kid or whatever uh if you're not comfortable doing that it'll show out right but if
00:24:44
you're walking down the street in Disguise nobody on that street is thinking oh that guy's in Disguise it's
00:24:50
not how people think right so unless you do something stupid it's not going to show out did you ever wear a Masque yeah
00:24:57
yeah that's apris look we had Hollywood makeup artists uh there that I mean their their disguise unit is legendary
00:25:05
amazing what they can do yeah why did you write company rules I felt like for
00:25:11
me over a short period of time after I'd been involved in private sector for for quite a
00:25:16
while it suddenly occurred to me that I was the reason why we were able to keep
00:25:21
a business breathing was because of some of these things that I absorbed from the company right the these rules the and
00:25:28
it's not like there a book they don't hand you a book and say Here's your company rules on day one right it's
00:25:34
they're implied they're they're kind of embedded in the training process of the CIA of the CIA right and so what I
00:25:42
hadn't realized was I because I thought when I got out look people asked me when I said I was going to leave I I didn't retire I was too young to retire I was
00:25:49
leaving right I left behind my pension and everything I didn't have there was no Financial reason to do what I did and
00:25:58
um so they were their question was always the same which what the hell you going to do I I didn't have an answer which
00:26:06
probably should have been a red flag but um I knew I was going to have to go into kind of this world of gathering
00:26:14
information of Security Services because I I don't think I'd fit anywhere else and so it took me a long
00:26:21
time to realize that the reason why I was able to build a business and I
00:26:27
couldn't have built a business with a very very close friend of mine uh Nick day who came out of of uh um SPS and and
00:26:35
uh MI5 um but we couldn't have done that if I
00:26:41
hadn't absorbed some of that training and those rules as I put them from the agency and so that's why I wanted to try
00:26:47
to say look this is why I was able to do this um and keep a business breathing
00:26:54
look we haven't built a mega Corporation but we built a nice life for a lot of people right and what are the most sort
00:26:59
of transferable rules that you were able to transfer from your time as a CI working in the CIA to the world of
00:27:07
business that you were like oh my God this is exactly the same game here the same technique I mean first and foremost
00:27:13
it was um we'll start out with the first one that I put down which which is Define the mission right so the agency
00:27:20
does that very well with a very outset you spend a lot of time sitting in classrooms listening to people explain
00:27:26
how the agency works why it works the way it does where it fits within the government what its purpose what it's
00:27:33
what its mission is and if you don't know that right then whether it's the CIA or whether it's your business then
00:27:40
you got a problem you probably shouldn't really get started and then you have to communicate that mission and that's what
00:27:46
they did very very well and so I took that away and I was always very simpl
00:27:52
minded in terms of a business I always knew what I wanted to do which was provide again the best quality product
00:27:59
possible that's how you get companies to stay with you for 20 years right they know you're going to bust your ass and
00:28:05
you're going to overproduce and you're going to do everything within again within the balance of what you can do to
00:28:10
give them the best information so that they can then win in whatever they're working or operating and then we we you
00:28:17
know I think if you if you hire smart people um and you explain the mission
00:28:22
you communicate that properly to them then you know your battles
00:28:28
half one right you really you know you you you've cracked that that uh that nut
00:28:33
but then other parts of it are uh you've got to know your uh your risk appetite
00:28:40
and the agency spends a lot of time I guess that was my point from earlier is it a lot of people think the agency just
00:28:46
goes out and does [ __ ] right let's just go blow that building up or let's go pick up that high value Target or let's
00:28:51
go whatever it is we're going to do and they don't give any thought to it because that's how the movies operate right and they just yeah go do this [ __ ]
00:28:57
um there's a lot of time spent on risk versus gain um and what's the potential
00:29:05
blowback what are those scenarios look like so you have to know your risk appetite and you have to communicate that because everybody has to be on the
00:29:11
same page as to what's allowable and what's not allowable and that's true in in in in private sector as well we have
00:29:17
to know you can't do this you can't have a a one party conversation and record it in particular jurisdiction or you know
00:29:24
no you can't can't do the following because the information you're Gathering is end up in court it's got to be you
00:29:29
know evidentially proper so things have to be done in a in a in an appropriate way so if you don't know all those
00:29:35
things then you're going to get yourself you know crosswise somehow um know your
00:29:41
operating environment is a key thing uh this is a a constant surprise sometimes
00:29:47
with with some companies that we start working with where you realize that they don't necessarily understand the
00:29:54
operating environment they where they're working what the market rest restrictions are what their competitors are doing right what the uh the
00:30:01
government is like in that particular country what the instability issues are what whatever it may be you put all that
00:30:07
together you know your operating environment you know your your risk uh you defined your mission and then at
00:30:13
some point you got to um make decisions right and I think that's again long-winded answer to your
00:30:20
question which is probably the most important thing I took away was uh what
00:30:26
I referred to as getting off the a and the a is the Ambush site so in in the old days you don't want to end up on the
00:30:32
Ambush site that's a bad place to be um and there are indicators right whether
00:30:37
you're talking about being in in Mexico and rolling up on a cartel Ambush or you're talking about being overseas uh
00:30:43
in a place like U Iraq and you're in a convoy movement and you have to
00:30:49
understand what the indicators are that something bad is is going to happen if you don't make a
00:30:54
decision you're never going to get all the information you want in business right but there are a lot of people who
00:31:01
get paralyzed by that they want all the data you know they want to be able to think through and that's you know that's a good thing if that's your mindset but
00:31:07
something bad's going to happen or you're going to miss an opportunity it's going to pass you by and so one of the
00:31:13
things that the agency taught was just make a damn decision right with the information that you've got you're
00:31:18
always going to want more but with the information that you've got whether it's imperfect or not understand the nature of that information but then just make a
00:31:25
damn decision right how do they get you to do that because there's a lot of people listening now that are maybe paralyzed in their own personal lives
00:31:32
with a decision to leave a job to leave a city to leave a partner yeah you know or a big strategic decision that's
00:31:39
actually really good it's a good point yeah uh I
00:31:44
I the agency teaches you through sort of repetition and and uh and understanding
00:31:51
that would sorry you waited too long this is this is not good you you uh but in a in a better sense I
00:31:59
think what I've learned also is look I tell my kids this all the time um I tell
00:32:05
my boys and my daughter this is it there's never that many options on
00:32:12
the decision tree right not that life's completely binary but we tend to
00:32:18
overthink everything and we tend to over complicate things when we're faced with a decision whether it's do I leave my my
00:32:24
job uh do I move whatever it might be do I you know take a big strategic decision for my company you tend to you tend to
00:32:32
over complicate right life I I've always found and maybe maybe I'm simple-minded
00:32:38
but one of the things that I I took away from the agency is that life sometimes is just as simple as it seems right
00:32:45
again why I'm not a big conspiracy theor theorist but um so if you narrow it down
00:32:53
and say look I'm not faced with an endless array of options here you know I may have on any big decision I may have
00:32:58
two or three options right I'm going to take this job okay what does that mean well it means I'm taking a chance take
00:33:05
okay people talk about writing your positives and your negatives down I don't know whether that's really a helpful thing or not right because then
00:33:12
you get lost in this list and then you start imagining positives and negatives and then it's a so I always try to say
00:33:18
look you gotta you don't act just for the sake of acting right that's sometimes has its own negative
00:33:23
consequences but you you take the information you've got and then you just you you make a decision right
00:33:32
because if you again if it's the inertia of not acting if you're if you're in an unhappy relationship and you say you
00:33:38
know what do I do do I stay in this unhappy relationship because maybe it's going to get better okay what are the odds of that happening right it's been
00:33:44
going on for 10 years maybe you're not happy get the hell out right do something different if you're thinking about changing your job if you're not
00:33:51
happy in your job which is a it's a quality of life issue right I and I tell that to to my folks all the time if you
00:33:58
think you would be happier somewhere else you got to go give it a try if you think you'd be happier going out and starting a business you should do that
00:34:04
right but you got to you got to jump in and I know I'm I'm this is probably not
00:34:10
as detailed as a you know psychiatrist would give but I really do honestly
00:34:16
believe that any any major decision you can distill it down to a very very
00:34:23
limited number of options and that makes it easier but if you just sit there staring at it and people do I would see the this in operations all the time
00:34:29
people would just start imagining all the different scenarios and I thought you know what honest to God when the the
00:34:36
when the whistle goes right and the Ambush starts and usually you shouldn't start an ambush with a whistle um you
00:34:43
know it's going to go you know one way another way you don't don't don't don't get bogged down in
00:34:49
what could happen What might happen that was another thing I think I I did well at the agency was I didn't ever sit
00:34:54
around and stare at my belly button and think well I wonder what would have happened if I had done this no you live
00:35:01
with your mistakes you live with your consequences you live with the good things life is tough enough as it is
00:35:08
right and we just we just seem like we want to make it tougher and I don't ever
00:35:13
understand that it's an interesting time in the United States at the moment is it something happen yeah I
00:35:20
mean it's an interesting time in the world to be honest when you think about everything that's going on very very unique times but Trump has just been
00:35:26
elected he's now president president-elect of the United States is that
00:35:32
consequential and if so how would you believe it to be
00:35:38
consequential yeah uh what do they say don't talk about politics religion or taxes um so yes I think it is
00:35:46
consequential um I think it was something that uh very few people
00:35:51
predicted the the size of the of the victory uh look he um he took all the
00:35:58
swing States right um he turned uh a surprising number of of districts uh in
00:36:06
favor of the Republicans in states that he didn't win um he outperformed in most
00:36:14
categories right uh the demographics were rather shocking right and people
00:36:20
wanted to talk about how well it's going to be the it's going to come down to the Women Voters well it didn't right fewer Women Voters voted for kamla Harris they
00:36:27
did previously for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden right so and he gained in uh
00:36:35
in Suburban voters Women Voters so it's consequential in reshaping at least in
00:36:41
in the short to midterm people's understanding of the uh the electorate I
00:36:47
think now it's probably not consequential in the fact that I don't know that the Democrats they don't seem
00:36:54
to be doing it yet I don't think they're going to be particularly uh uh self-aware or introspective right
00:37:01
they spent months longer than that referring to a large portion of the
00:37:08
population as uh as moronic as unintelligent as sexist as racist as um
00:37:14
as as garbage as fascists as Nazis right they you how you do that and then
00:37:21
not understand how you've just gotten kicked in the ass during the election I'm not quite sure but they seem
00:37:27
incapable right now of any sort of reflection on what they need to do as a party right to maybe turn things around
00:37:35
so I don't know consequentially whether it's going to change the Democrat Party for the next election um but yeah it'll
00:37:44
be and and then you have to ask yourself okay the policies that you know that that are important um from National
00:37:50
Security perspective from foreign policy you know what are we looking at differently here with Trump coming in do
00:37:56
do you think he's going to end some Wars like the war in the Ukraine and Russia do you think he's going to end that
00:38:02
because I mean he's he's pretty much said in the election cycle that he was gonna call Putin an end it on day one or
00:38:09
something like that so I yeah that's right I forgot about that it's gonna end it on day one gonna
00:38:15
stop this war
00:38:20
um yeah with set Trump over here to the side for a second M and you have to look at the
00:38:27
what's happening on the ground right with Ukraine and Russia because that will determine whether Trump's going to
00:38:33
be successful in any move that he makes so the problem that Ukraine is facing
00:38:40
right now is a they're going into winter and a massive percentage of their uh energy
00:38:47
infrastructure has been destroyed by by Russia so it's going to be a very hard winter um you look at the resolve of the
00:38:56
Ukrainian people and uh an Institute in ke does these very
00:39:03
interesting um surveys of Ukrainian citizens in in in throughout Ukraine not just in Kei on a regular basis and they
00:39:11
ask questions like you know um are you willing to fight indefinitely are you
00:39:18
willing to stay in the game are you willing to give it your all you know for however long it takes and to that
00:39:25
question to that phrasing at the beginning of the year 73% said yes right of the
00:39:32
citizenry uh last month it was uh 63% right it's and so that's a 10% drop
00:39:39
is significant when we're talking about the fate of your nation um
00:39:45
they they're losing um they're losing soldiers at an
00:39:51
alarming rate and they have a significant uh disadvantage to the
00:39:56
Russians terms of Manpower Russian Manpower has depending on who you talk to maybe a three to1 advantage in terms
00:40:03
of available combatants um the Russian military is gaining
00:40:10
ground in the eastern part of Ukraine in theet in particular it's a the the the front the front line is about 600 miles
00:40:18
long 620 miles long um in overall right now if you said stop
00:40:27
the war stop the fighting right now Russia controls 20% of Ukraine good time
00:40:35
to my little map here so you can show me what you're talking
00:40:44
about why why did Russia start this war well I mean if you if you wanted a
00:40:52
sort of a theoretical 30,000 foot answer um
00:40:58
Putin has repeatedly uh referred to the collapse of the Soviet Union as the greatest
00:41:05
disaster of the 20th century and he meant it right and so he's been trying and he hasn't been shy about it ever
00:41:12
since he's he's been in charge which seems now like about 100 years um to
00:41:18
recreate the glory the strength of the former Soviet Union in some capacity not not you know entirely he's not he's not
00:41:25
crazy but he is completely jonesing for some form
00:41:31
of of a of a stronger Russia um and in his mind that means he's got to have a
00:41:38
buffer zone between him and NATO right and so this is this is part of that he
00:41:44
also considers if you if you think about it right here he's basically
00:41:51
saying this is mine right if you think that which is the east of this is this is the Eastern part of Ukraine right
00:41:58
here is it's Ukraine um Front Line This is not I mean you know I'm simplifying
00:42:03
this but front line stretches about 600 miles uh he's also annexed of course
00:42:08
Crimea but that's that's another issue here and that's that's the only port for their Black Sea Fleet which Ukrainian
00:42:14
military is frankly destroyed almost um at this stage of the game but they own
00:42:21
at this stage they've got about 20% of of uh Ukraine if you were to say
00:42:27
you know stop the shooting now and then the the the problem is that at
00:42:34
the outset of this this war zalinski and the Ukrainian
00:42:41
government uh said you know the only answer here is total Victory we have to
00:42:47
get all our territory back Crimea detet Lans zapia uh we have to
00:42:54
get it all back and that is not again it's not satisfying to say this but it's
00:43:02
not possible right so the problem that is being faced right now
00:43:09
is when this war got started in the first year year and a half everybody was
00:43:15
you know they were putting their Flags Ukrainian flags on their porch they were putting a little flag on their their X
00:43:21
site their Twitter site um they go okay and there's no doubt the Ukrainian
00:43:27
military has been incredibly courageous and the population of Ukraine has put up with a great deal look the months of
00:43:34
September and October of this year those two months there's only been
00:43:39
one night when keev hasn't been under attack by Russian drones
00:43:46
right which is if you think about it it's insane right and that's just Kei they all their other their major cities
00:43:53
have also been under attack by the Russians they've destroyed much of their energy infrastructure um now a bright
00:44:01
spot was for for the Ukrainian military was that they did a surprise offensive
00:44:07
into KK which is Russian territory and in doing that that was the first time
00:44:13
there were foreign troops on Russian Turf right since World War II um and
00:44:20
that really shocked the hell out of Putin and and the Russian military and they acted as if they really didn't know
00:44:26
how to resp respond didn't have the resources to respond but this is a game of attrition right we're going into our
00:44:33
you know full third year early this coming year um
00:44:39
and what's kept them in the fight is US support and EU or NATO support the eu's
00:44:45
done very good job I mean look they've they've picked up uh a great part of the
00:44:50
of the the uh the effort without that support this thing
00:44:56
would never have lasted lasted this long never and so I think Putin in part has been very surprised he miscalculated a
00:45:02
lot of things but he miscalculated the sort of support that Ukraine would receive from nato in particular um
00:45:09
and now and why is NATO giving so much support why is this in their interests
00:45:15
well think about where Ukraine is yeah think about where Poland is look Russian missiles have flown errantly into into
00:45:21
Poland um their history tells them or
00:45:27
informs them that if Putin takes this Ukraine yeah it takes Ukraine then it's
00:45:35
not as if he's going to say okay I'm done I'm finished right they believe now whether they're right or not this is but
00:45:41
this answers the question about why such strong NATO support they believe that that's not his inclination right it's
00:45:47
not in his his character to say that's all I want I'm good what do you think I
00:45:52
take him at his word when he says he wants to recreate the former Soviet
00:45:57
Union in a fashion do I think this is enough of a buffer from NATO for him I don't think so do I think he might uh
00:46:04
consider moving a little bit further north look he already has this is Belarus bellus is a solid Ally of uh of
00:46:11
Putin um but is there a chance that you know he says to himself well well you know maybe over here he's already made
00:46:17
verbal threats up here so L Latvia yeah and so I I think I understand what their
00:46:25
mindset is it's like Israel right we sometimes we like oh my God why is Israel acting the way they do well
00:46:31
because they're surrounded by a ring of terrorist proxy that all are there to
00:46:36
serve the purpose of the Iranian regime which is to destroy Israel so that's their mindset right we don't live there
00:46:42
we don't understand it so to say okay well that's ridiculous for someone in the US to go it's ridiculous that that's
00:46:48
Putin okay you know well [ __ ] off you don't live here right you're not in Poland watching this if he takes over
00:46:54
Ukraine and so and world wasn't so long ago exactly it wasn't until I studied
00:47:01
World War II which actually wasn't very long ago it was about 6 months ago that I understood the sort of geopolitical
00:47:08
backdrop as to why you need to defend Ukraine because when you see you can probably explain it better than me but
00:47:13
what Hitler did and he just took a little bit was it like Czechoslovakia just a little bit take this piece and a
00:47:19
little bit more and then he took a little bit more and then a little bit more and by by the end of it he was trying to take the UK he was trying to
00:47:24
take Russia he was trying to take the lot over here in the states right you had this isolationist feeling so World
00:47:30
War II is happening um and they don't want any of it right they've went through World War I they sent a lot of
00:47:36
their boys over and they're like no screw it you know look we got this big ocean here you know we don't have to
00:47:41
worry about it and yeah that that was that's a problem and but you see that now there's some of this this
00:47:47
isolationist attitude which is why do we even care and that's a okay fine that's a great question to ask people should
00:47:53
ask questions like that but um yeah I'm telling you having having worked against
00:47:59
Russia for for a long period of time U it's a mistake not to take Putin at his
00:48:06
word right and and we tend to always mirror our values it's like when we were talking about the cab driver how do you
00:48:11
get him into a conversation you start to mirror the values right and we do that as a nation sometimes in the us where we
00:48:18
imagine that people are going to react the same way or think the same way about Freedom or democracy what and and it's
00:48:25
not how the world works so I just going back here to to the incursion into um
00:48:31
into Russia that the Ukrainian military did so they they've hold they're holding territory up there maybe it depends on
00:48:37
who you talk to maybe um 500 square miles it's it varies but they've
00:48:43
stretched their resources relatively thin and that's a problem because it all goes back to War as long as we've known
00:48:51
war which is supply lines right if you if you can't maintain your supply lines you you've you know lost the plot and so
00:49:00
what we're seeing right now is Putin has amassed about 40,000 Russian troops and
00:49:06
about 10,000 North Korean troops and that's another that's another story so North North Korea because Kim Jong-un of
00:49:12
North Korea is best buddies now with Putin he has sent upwards of 12,000 troops to Russia and they are now on the
00:49:21
front lines essentially they're already in combat but they're an important part of of of Putin's effort and I I think
00:49:29
what he's trying to do Trump has won takes us back to our original point of okay what's Trump
00:49:35
going to do and what's this going to look like after the uh inauguration Trump's one I think there's
00:49:42
a calculation here Putin could be saying I've got to do everything now I've got to throw everything I can to gain that
00:49:49
Russian territory back before sitting down at a negotiating table and coming
00:49:55
up with a deal I don't want to sit at the negotiating table if zinski and NATO are saying we have part of your Russian
00:50:01
territory you want it back well we're going to need we're going to need this back we're going to need eastern Ukraine
00:50:07
back or we're going to need Crimea back I don't think he's ever given back Crimea right but it's likely I think if
00:50:13
you have to make these decisions and without real insight into his mindset um
00:50:18
it's it's true it's all speculation but I I wouldn't be surprised if what he's calculated right now is I got to throw
00:50:25
all these troops to re gain this Russian territory the ukrainians surprised Us by taking ahead of sitting down and doing a
00:50:32
negotiated settlement which again is going to be very unsatisfying to all those people who put Ukrainian flags on
00:50:38
their porch and oh they're going to get all their territory back no they're not they don't have the ability to do that
00:50:44
and and I hope that what we don't see is if Trump well when Trump comes into
00:50:51
office um I think he and the people that he will have around him working on this
00:50:57
issue will be sufficiently convinced that they have to maintain a level of
00:51:03
support that allows Ukraine to sit down at the negotiating table from at least a
00:51:08
position of relative strength right um otherwise they're just sitting and
00:51:13
they're asking you know for whatever they can get in this deal and that's not that's never going to sell zelinsky's
00:51:19
got to sell this to the the Ukrainian population this is an incredible moment in time right this is this is an
00:51:25
invading this is this is an invading force from Russia into another country an independent country
00:51:33
um and there's there there's so much complexity it's hard to explain and you know without saying okay we're going to
00:51:38
take the next five or six days to talk about it but it's an incredible moment in time and so yes it matters a great
00:51:46
deal about you know is this consequential it's consequential if worst case scenario um the next
00:51:54
Administration says that's it we're cutting off all assist and all Aid well the rest of NATO will definitely stay in
00:52:00
the game right because they view it differently because they're right here but us support is critical and it's
00:52:08
critical to get a settlement and if what you want is to end War to stop the the the
00:52:15
killing um and if you're pragmatic you have to
00:52:20
you have to assume this is going to be a settlement that means that Russia's going to keep maybe not all of this
00:52:25
maybe they'll keep this much and this will be maybe a demilitarized zone right uh patrolled by un peacekeepers or
00:52:31
whatever to act as a buffer but then you have other issues is Putin going to say
00:52:37
no part of this deal has got to be that Ukraine never joins NATO that's I'm sure that's going to be
00:52:43
a part of his deal um and then how NATO deals with that I have no idea because
00:52:49
you know they've already made sort of a guarantee okay you're going to be in at some point anyway that's uh how do you
00:52:56
think it end if you had to be if you had to bet I think uh look part of the reason why um part of the reason why the
00:53:04
the North Korean troops have ended up in in in Russia which is again is an
00:53:10
astounding thing um is because Putin desperately doesn't want to do another
00:53:15
conscription he knows that's vastly unpopular with his with his folks which is when you ask your you basically
00:53:22
people round up more people right I'm I'm going to need I'm going to need another 50,000 soldiers because he runs
00:53:29
what's essentially called a meat grinder operation he just throws people in the front right as Canon F I mean the the
00:53:36
Russian casualty rate has been ridiculous right compared to um the the
00:53:43
ukrainians but they've been willing to sacrifice um all those people so I think
00:53:49
the the the idea being look Kim Jong-un he's making money off of this deal sending troops up there he's getting the
00:53:55
troops that survive anyway will get combat experience and he doesn't have a military with any combat experience
00:54:00
right now and he's also getting weapons technology transfer from Russia so he's getting part of a deal here what's Putin
00:54:07
getting I think Putin's just getting bodies he can throw out there ahead of the next wave which will be Russian
00:54:12
troops right so I think I think those 10,000 North Koreans uh soldiers are
00:54:17
[ __ ] there's been a a rising sentiment in the United States that we should stop sending money to Ukraine and why are we
00:54:24
bothering and this isn't our problem etc etc MH what do you say to those people
00:54:29
because that sentiment is rising and it's rising from my opinion it's rising on the right side of politics I hear it
00:54:35
more and more on some of the big podcasts I hear it more and more on um X and Twitter and again it's only because
00:54:42
I I researched what happened in Nazi Germany in World War II that I suddenly go this is much more complicated than
00:54:49
you think and you can embolden someone if you don't resist their them invading
00:54:54
a local country yeah and why put one right well look I mean this and and the thing
00:55:01
is the world the world is shrinking right the world is and has been and continues to shrink nothing happens in a
00:55:08
bubble so what's happening right here is being watched by uh you know xiin ping
00:55:14
in China right in terms of Taiwan I mean he's sitting there saying okay here's Taiwan there's a straight of Taiwan it's
00:55:20
no distance whatsoever he's just conducted xiin ping and the Chinese regime has just conducted the large lest
00:55:26
military exercise around Taiwan ever basically blocking it off blocking the ports and uh you know patrolling the
00:55:32
airs Airway uh Airway so the idea being he just wanted to show that he could do
00:55:37
that right and so he's watching what's happening over here in terms of the US response and NATO response and and say
00:55:45
okay at what point does it make sense for me to do this because at the end of the day xiin ping is tied to his desired
00:55:52
Legacy which is the reunification and and in his mind this belongs right here and so so let's we'll move on to China
00:55:58
then um question was how do you think it ends if you're a betting man how do you think the Ukrainian war ends I think in
00:56:05
this coming year I think in part I know I've talked a lot about what the ukrainians are suffering from but
00:56:10
there's there are reasons why Putin is going to need to uh figure this out as well I think part of it is his economy
00:56:17
is is is suffering um and so I think it finishes with a
00:56:23
negotiated settlement at some point during 20 25 and I think that means uh
00:56:30
the lines are going to look again I keep using the word unsatisfactory but that's
00:56:35
the way it's going to feel to a lot of people uh the lines are going to look a lot like they did before The Invasion uh
00:56:41
maybe a some additional territory being held by the Russians and then I do think that there will be some agreement to
00:56:48
have a buffer zone uh that will be essentially under the opes of un
00:56:54
peacekeeping troops somehow um you know no fly zone whatever you want to call it as well I think that's
00:57:01
how it's going to end up I think K that region in in in uh in Russia goes back to the Russians I think that problem's
00:57:07
going to be I think in the short order um I think they're going to want to move quickly right before we get into the
00:57:13
teeth of winter um I think that's going to be a mess so that's going to be a major when they start that offensive and
00:57:20
we're talking again potentially 50,000 troops thrown at uh a relatively Thin
00:57:27
Line um I think that territory goes back to Russia in the next
00:57:32
month I would I would suspect yeah I mean basically you don't you don't put troops there you know with all those
00:57:38
resources without intending to to use them um and I think the longer those
00:57:44
North Korean troops sit there the more trouble they will have in terms of command and control so they're going to want to get them into the uh into into
00:57:51
the cannon uh as quickly as possible so you mentioned China China
00:57:56
feel like Taiwan is there Taiwan is this little island off the coast of China I hear about this um this plan
00:58:04
that they say China has which is the 2049 plan what is China's 2049
00:58:12
plan well part of that was based around a timeline um for uh how we want to
00:58:18
refer to it the reunification the absorption of Taiwan the taking over of Taiwan nobody really knows what that
00:58:24
will look like because there's a a concern um you know is it going to be a
00:58:29
completely kinetic is it going to be a military operation uh is it going to be more of a soft takeover uh sort of like
00:58:37
U you know there's it's a good example right here Hong Kong um you remember
00:58:42
there used to be democracy in Hong Kong and now there's not um and that happened
00:58:47
over a period of time but they basically just squashed all remnants of democracy
00:58:52
particularly during the pandemic so what's it going to look like when they do take over Taiwan that's that's the
00:58:58
big question but the timeline has shrunk so they now there's some feeling that
00:59:04
the movement on Taiwan will be during the course of XI jinping's tenure right
00:59:10
so what are you looking at well that depends on his grip on power which seems very solid um it seems like it depends
00:59:17
on his health which you know again I be speculating but so I don't see him
00:59:23
riding off into the sunset willingly without finishing that project that in
00:59:28
his mind is so important um he's Consolidated power in in China like nobody
00:59:34
since Den jaia ping or or Mali dong you know so I think um I think he's serious
00:59:41
again take take certain leaders at their word some you know some Bluster a lot some some make very big pronouncements
00:59:48
Donald Trump would be one of them who tends to just speak off the cuff and throw things out I think the danger
00:59:53
sometimes is is the the Dem democrats for example take him at his word right for everything he says right they take
00:59:59
everything he says literally um but there are other leaders um Putin shiing ping I think you need to pay real close
01:00:07
attention to exactly what they're saying so I think when he talks about the you know absorbing Taiwan and and making it
01:00:13
part of the motherland again I he's not kidding around why does he want Taiwan it looks like such an insignificant part
01:00:19
of that part of the map it's so small in comparison to to China it's a good point when you look at the map you go really
01:00:26
need to bother um you know what it's part of it is is is the history right
01:00:31
and you know ever since the the you know the Chen Kai Sheek and you know the separatist and escaping to Taiwan and
01:00:40
raising it as a separate nation it's just it's it's hard to explain but it's
01:00:47
a very emotive subject right why does the US care so much about Taiwan um that's a better question too
01:00:56
um okay part of that is part of that is uh I don't want to
01:01:02
say emotional but it's the idea of look there Democratic institutions um it's an ally you know
01:01:09
how could we possibly Stand By and Watch a Communist Regime you know step on it and and and destroy it part of it is um
01:01:18
practical it's like you know it's it's an important chip manufacturing center so you know there's a couple elements to
01:01:25
it um honestly look if if if all the chip manufacturing on Taiwan was
01:01:32
reshored over to California somewhere um would we care quite as much well we
01:01:39
would still care on that sort of emotional values-based uh
01:01:45
side we could probably we could probably Overlook it in a long run now are we going to send boots on the ground over
01:01:52
to defend Taiwan if there if there's a military action uh um you know going back to your betting person I would bet
01:01:58
no no matter who's in office but they will say they're going to defend Taiwan everyone all of the like the US
01:02:05
presidents are always asked would you defend Taiwan if Russia invaded and you'll probably know some of the quotes better than I do but they've all said
01:02:10
that they would yeah yeah the only slip up at one point was uh uh Biden where he
01:02:16
I don't think he really meant to say what he said which was you know sort of ambiguous towards the the defense of
01:02:21
Taiwan but then he corrected it um so do I honestly think that we would send
01:02:29
uh troops over no no I don't um do I think that we would do what we're doing
01:02:34
with Ukraine sure yeah would we provide resources but this is a much different
01:02:40
uh situation right um and so I
01:02:45
think while I get uh the concept uh I
01:02:50
just don't know that there's be follow through because that is a very tough cell to
01:02:58
explain why we're sending troops over to face down the Chinese military which is
01:03:04
about a Stones throw away from Taiwan and look this is going to be an
01:03:10
interesting situation right because the folks over here the folks in
01:03:15
China they don't view the folks in Taiwan as Taiwanese they view them as Chinese right so are you going to have
01:03:21
you know Chinese military shooting Chinese I don't know maybe it's going to be a softer takeover maybe there's going
01:03:28
to there's more influence there's a massive disinformation campaigns that go on on Taiwan courtesy of the Chinese
01:03:33
regime there's all sorts of efforts there to to undermine uh Taiwanese leadership
01:03:40
but it this is again the point being is this is a crisis look this is already this is a mess and has been and it's
01:03:48
underway and it's in Ukraine situation but over here this is looming right as a
01:03:53
major issue and and if you think about the there other activities this is is what's referred to as a South China Sea
01:03:59
right which is below Taiwan it is yes and it's it's um this is the Philippines
01:04:04
here uh Vietnam over here China has always viewed this as their territory
01:04:11
right this this is their backyard well ever since World War II the US is
01:04:16
essentially patrolled and and maintained Security in the South China Sea right in
01:04:22
the interest of international free trade and you know freedom of movement um there are increasing numbers of
01:04:28
encounters between the the Chinese Navy and the Philippines uh Vietnamese over
01:04:35
um this this sea because again they view this as theirs they're constantly in
01:04:41
here pushing they're building uh uh artificial Islands there for ports um
01:04:47
there's there's a major flash point here right for for potential
01:04:52
conflict and China I've talked to number of experts that I really value and their
01:05:00
take is and I think it's not incorrect is that China is basically on a war footing with the West already right we
01:05:08
just don't see it or we don't feel it or we don't want to acknowledge it and I don't mean like they're going to launch
01:05:13
missiles but in their minds they're at war with the US already and they're they're acting in a sense as if that's
01:05:20
the case and we act as if well they're just an economic competitor but it would be nice if we could all get along
01:05:26
um so I think we may be misreading the the tea leaves who's the the real enemy
01:05:32
of the West in your opinion who who would you if you were the president of the United States who would you be most
01:05:37
concerned about well this is this is our biggest
01:05:43
this is our biggest concern right China China is the is I think is the Topline concern because of their their abilities
01:05:51
their resources um and you know again the sort of the increasing aggressiveness in this region um their
01:05:58
desire to uh reshape the the global structure right they don't want the West
01:06:04
to be in charge they you know they view this as you know how do we realign this so that we get what you know the bricks
01:06:09
and and uh uh a different realignment of of world order so that the US and its
01:06:16
allies are not at the top of the food chain so in a sense that doesn't mean that I think that we're going to be in a
01:06:23
in a in a shooting match with China anytime soon I don't actually believe that's going to be the case but that's
01:06:28
where we have to focus a lot of our concerns when you talk about identifying and resolving and you know prioritizing
01:06:35
threats um in the short term um right here is
01:06:42
Iran and look the Iranian regime has been
01:06:48
engaged in uh assassination plots to try to kill uh now the president elect uh as
01:06:57
well as several other uh us officials whom they uh believe were responsible
01:07:02
for the targeting back in 2020 of KM solomani who ran the kuds force and was
01:07:08
a very close Ally of the supreme leader Kaman in Iran you think Iran have tried
01:07:14
to kill Trump oh they have definitely yeah there's no doubt that that they've been engaged in they have a hit list and
01:07:20
they've actually been engaged in trying to get uh plots underway um to uh you
01:07:26
know to uh Target not just him but Mike Pompeo uh Mark Millie former head of the or chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
01:07:33
Mark eser former Secretary of Defense Brian hook uh and others so but I guess
01:07:38
you know from a setting that aside setting aside the bizarreness of this state with a hit list of US officials
01:07:46
right and that's just saying that out loud should make people think well that is bizarre but what they've done in
01:07:53
terms of uh establishing and building over the years this this network of of
01:08:00
proxies thetis Islamic jihadah Kamas um Iran has stated numerous times they've
01:08:06
been very clear about it their desire their objective is to wipe Israel from the face of the the Earth so they've set
01:08:13
up their proxies with the same objective and the idea being okay we'll let the proxies do the dirty work we're not
01:08:19
going to take accountability we're not going to be in the direct line of fire now that's happened a couple of times
01:08:24
right there's been this direct you know back and forth between Iran and Israel um so this is a this is a very serious
01:08:31
problem that will not be resolved as long as the Iranian regime and the Revolutionary guard Corps the
01:08:39
irgc maintain their belief system that Israel needs to be wiped off the face of the Earth as long as they believe that
01:08:47
they will continue to be the primary cause of instability um in uh the Middle
01:08:52
East so we talk talk about getting ceasefires in Gaza talk about ceasefire
01:08:58
with Hezbollah in Lebanon not that there's much left of the hesah leadership but that's just putting
01:09:04
lipstick on a pig right because you're not solving the problem and you know I don't know that you change the belief
01:09:10
structure of the Iranian regime and the irgc so in that case what do you hope
01:09:16
for what you hope for internally that there will be at some point the population would just say we've had
01:09:22
enough right I mean there have been how many cases do we need where you know women go out on the streets to protest
01:09:29
right the new morality laws and they disappear right they're just they're it it's brutal yeah you don't hear any of
01:09:36
that you don't hear people you know you don't hear activists in the States going on college campuses and protesting the treatment of of women in in Iran no it's
01:09:44
always you know God my god look what Israel is doing those protests in Iran do the United States fuel those protests
01:09:52
do they cause disinformation in that country to try and stabiliz it to try and get a coup so that they can throw
01:09:57
out the leadership is that how the world Works um you know what it I'm going to what I'm going to say I think a lot of
01:10:03
people who would look at my background and go well of course that son of a [ __ ] is going to say that this is what
01:10:08
I would say is that what happens um
01:10:14
is okay let me put it this way year in years pasted yeah that's what would have
01:10:20
happened we would have tried to say okay how do we get that that Uprising how do we get that
01:10:26
but now it's more how do we get information into those people and then if there is a protest that develops how
01:10:33
do we support it what do you do to support that uh that I would argue has you know
01:10:39
not worked um the green movement and and few other un you know unsuccessful
01:10:45
attempts by people to kind of get out on the streets and protest have been brutally put down and and the US and the
01:10:51
UN and others for the most part you know they're going to protest and write a nasty memo but none of it helps right
01:10:59
how do you get information to the people in a country like that you know they have they have access to some degree
01:11:06
most of it's locked down I guess but but they have access to some degree so you try to you try to push information out look Voice of America is is probably the
01:11:13
best example over the years vaa was for years its whole purpose was how do we
01:11:19
get information about what happens in the world um into Russia into the Soviet
01:11:24
Union and nowadays you know you could argue you've got more possibilities because of
01:11:31
Technology U that's outside my scope and we start talking about how do you you know aside from dropping leaflets um
01:11:38
which which bizarrely enough in South Korea and North Korea they still do South Korea drops leaflets using
01:11:45
balloons over North Korean territory to convince people that Kim Jong on is bad and that life could be better um but
01:11:52
yeah I the the worst part is with Iran is you just look these people are under
01:11:57
the thumb of the mulles in the irgc and they are brutal right it's like it's like Hamas Hamas has ruled Gaza
01:12:04
with an Iron Fist and they've been brutal against anyone that they disagree with lgbtq activists women name them and and
01:12:13
yet you know you never see protests outside the country about Hamas you know how they beat um you know uh a gay
01:12:21
activist it doesn't happen right the C campus protests are all about Israel Israel is surrounded by a ring of of
01:12:28
proxies built by Iran that wants to destroy them so yes they're going to think differently than we do what
01:12:34
happened in Israel on that day where I mean people rushed into the their country and
01:12:40
thousands of people died yeah as of that yeah their estimate was 12200 and then
01:12:45
uh 250 were dragged off into uh into Gaza I just don't know how that that's
01:12:50
possible when that that state is so unbelievably paranoid about invasions and attacks and they have the the Iron
01:12:58
Dome how does that happen how do and yeah it that was a um it was a
01:13:05
long-term uh project that was very well orchestrated by Hamas uh with Iran the
01:13:12
rgc was fully aware of what was going on the rgc provided some of the training to some of the Kamas Fighters that
01:13:17
eventually ended up in inside Southern Israel um so probably the best way to
01:13:24
put it would be they lulled the Israeli government to
01:13:29
sleep and the the military to sleep they made them believe that they really weren't interested in violence anymore
01:13:36
and what that did and and that what they really wanted was okay we just want to like try to build up our economy right
01:13:44
and and try to make a better life well that was horseshit on hamas's part that's what the Palestinians would like
01:13:50
but that was horeshit on hamas's part um what they were doing was
01:13:55
lulling them to sleep in that then they kind of took their eye off the ball the Israeli government in particular started
01:14:02
looking more inward you know you had a lot of internal political battles going on um and they were doing that because
01:14:09
they viewed that they didn't have the same existential threat on their doorstep that they had been dealing with right they they sort of took the bait
01:14:16
and it was an intelligence failure there's no doubt about it in part because the uh the people running that
01:14:22
operation dumbed down their Communications right they deliberately stopped using Communications that they
01:14:28
felt could be compromised or had been compromised and we we've seen that over
01:14:34
the years um Al-Qaeda is a good example once Al-Qaeda understood uh the extent to which we could intercept their
01:14:40
Communications you know they went back to the old days right handing handwritten notes right this is my
01:14:46
cousin I want you to take it to that person over there who's his cousin only give him that note right don't talk to
01:14:51
anybody very hard to intercept right very and so you you no it's very hard to conduct your operations it takes a lot
01:14:57
more time um but that's the extent to which they went to try to get this thing
01:15:03
done and uh yeah unfortunately they were very successful how are you thinking about
01:15:09
the world's perception specifically the United States perception of what's going on in Israel and Palestine you know we
01:15:14
talked about how support seems to be waning for providing support to Ukraine is support waning do you believe for
01:15:21
Israel and the plight of Israel because there's been a lot of information around the amount of innocent people that have
01:15:26
been killed in Palestine yeah I would be more concerned about um Ukrainian
01:15:33
support and I would be losing um the level of Israeli support why because I
01:15:39
think um it's a little bit of a different Dynamic right there's Israel has always kind of had this this
01:15:45
interesting place within us psyche I guess and um and it's also look there's
01:15:51
a massive Jewish American Community right I mean there's no doubt about that so there's there's a level of support
01:15:57
there that that Ukraine doesn't have um
01:16:02
and and also just the length of support look we've been we've been close allies of Israel for Generations right ever
01:16:09
since it it started uh you can't say the same thing about Ukraine so I guess I'm
01:16:14
hopeful that moving into the next Administration and I know people say oh my God you know you sounds like you're a
01:16:20
warmonger well no again I go back to with Ukraine if you want peace peace if that's what you want if you don't want
01:16:26
the conflict then my argument is they've got to be able to sit down at a negotiating table if Putin feels like
01:16:33
he's winning right if he feels like the US is backing off he's not going to
01:16:38
negotiate he's just going to move forward he doesn't he doesn't give a [ __ ] about his soldiers he just keeps throwing them into the front lines right
01:16:45
so if you want peace here then you need to continue support sufficiently to get
01:16:50
them to the table and I do think we're we're we're close because again I don't you know Russia yes they're making
01:16:56
Headway here but a longterm you know meaning another two or three years I
01:17:02
don't think I don't think Putin can sustain that with the Russian population so how does Israel palestine's war
01:17:09
end unfortunately I I again being a cynic um I think it ends the way a lot
01:17:15
of these have ended which means we're just putting a Band-Aid on a sucking chest wound and they'll come up with a
01:17:22
ceasefire um I think Kamas they'll figure out a way to bring in the
01:17:27
Palestinian Authority to govern Hamas or sorry Gaza um I think uh I think sort of
01:17:36
the Lynch pin there is if they can get a ceasefire with uh with Gaza with
01:17:41
Hamas that will make it infinitely easier for the hooes to say okay we'll back off we're not going to keep
01:17:48
screwing up the Red Sea firing missiles at International Trade and us and Allied naval ships and I think think that it
01:17:55
also allows for Hezbollah look I think the Israelis look at Hezbollah leadership now I think we've pretty much
01:18:00
taken everybody out um and there's more of a structure in in
01:18:06
Lebanon I think it's it's always been problematic but I think the Lebanese government could um you know could deal
01:18:14
with the problem if there is a an official ceasefire with hezb so I think
01:18:19
it all comes down to um
01:18:24
and I guess what I mean by the bandaid on a second chest wound is that's all well and good we'll stop the conflicts
01:18:30
right I think those will stop relatively soon um I don't think Iran is interested
01:18:35
in getting into a bigger shooting match with Israel because I I think they understand there's no way they do that
01:18:41
without the US entering the US has already got you know carriers forward deployed out here a big show of force
01:18:47
right we moved B52 fortresses out there nuclear capable not that that we would drop nukes but it's a show of force
01:18:55
that I think Iran understands and the mullers the mullers the irgc in
01:19:01
particular which has its fingers in every part of the Iranian economy and has made itself wealthy much like the Hamas leadership made themselves Wealthy
01:19:07
by stealing billions that leadership in Iran it's very similar to Putin in a
01:19:13
sense and very similar over here to xiin Ping the one thing they want more than anything else is to retain control so
01:19:20
the Iranian regime is going to look at this and go can we really afford to get into a shooting match with the US and
01:19:25
Israel and the answer is no they can't win that so I think they're not inclined to to do this so we're going to get
01:19:31
these ceasefires and then we're just kicking the can down the road but if they get nuclear weapons then they can
01:19:37
hold their weight absolutely absolutely yeah and that will that will completely change the the calculus in terms of how
01:19:43
do we deal with them and the negoti so and again this going to make me sound like a warmonger but that last um that
01:19:50
last um retaliatory strike by Israel into Iran they focused on Missile production
01:19:56
facilities and air defense systems now that's smart in that destroying a
01:20:04
significant portion of their missile production capabilities impacts their ability to both attack directly Israel
01:20:10
but also then to provide those missiles to their proxies the air defense You could argue is setting the table right
01:20:18
if they decide that that breakout window for the Iranian regime to get a nuke is
01:20:24
tightening uh to a point where it's not really acceptable and if you've if
01:20:29
you've basically destroyed their defense systems and they somewhat naked in that regard then you're talking about you
01:20:36
know dropping and trying to disrupt their their weapons capability the most of that is significantly underground how
01:20:43
do we know they don't have a nuclear weapon I don't think they could have kept their Yap shut they would have told us because for what you're saying which
01:20:50
is okay now what right um I don't think that I don't think they could have kept
01:20:56
that secret plus also we rely on our liaison Partners so the Israeli intelligence Jordanian intelligence
01:21:02
Saudi intelligence we rely on a sort of a input from a lot of the players look the the Saudis the jordanians and others
01:21:08
would they be upset if the Iranian regime would to change no they would they would like what do they want they want they want stability right because
01:21:16
that leads to economic Prosperity that's better for their populations keeps their folks happy um and so you know you know
01:21:24
are they going to come right out and say it no but there's a lot of reasons so I think the the the problem with these
01:21:29
ceasefires not again it's it's good you want to end conflict um you don't want people suffering it it would be
01:21:36
fantastic if the Palestinians had a much better opportunity for a great life but
01:21:41
you don't get there as long as the Iranian regime and and the irgc are saying we want to destroy Israel so
01:21:47
we're going to keep pushing at it um that's not really a recipe for long-term stability so that's why I say they're
01:21:53
kind of key to this whole problem why is the US so focused on Iran of all these
01:21:59
countries not getting a nuclear weapon the US seem obsessed with making sure Iran of all people don't get a nuclear
01:22:05
weapon well because they're the largest state sponsor of terrorism is one issue
01:22:10
and um and they've shown it right I mean they they've been perfectly willing to look I mean the the fellow who was
01:22:16
killed in 2020 uh who was the head of the goods force cassm solomani uh and it was his targeting
01:22:24
that then created the supreme leader desire and the Iranian regime's desire to Target us officials including the
01:22:31
president-elect um he had the blood of thousands of US soldiers on his hands
01:22:37
because he was running operations um to develop IEDs uh and get them out in the
01:22:43
field uh train up uh Iraqi militias to uh so I again they hate the US they hate
01:22:51
the US yeah so I look it's it again going back to that same thing it'd
01:22:56
be lovely if we all lived in a community of Nations but when I look at a map like this I don't see a community of Nations
01:23:02
I see problems which again maybe makes me just a cynical old bastard problems
01:23:09
you recently said we're in a more sensitive time right now than in recent modern times than we can recall and you
01:23:16
were referring here to nuclear weapons people are normalizing the
01:23:21
limited use of nukes and that is worrisome we've got Russia doing tactical Nuclear drills on the border
01:23:29
alongside Ukraine how can how concerned should we be about nuclear weapons and why should
01:23:35
we be so concerned I actually didn't realize until recently when I spoke to Annie Jacobson that the president has
01:23:41
the sole responsibility and the sole power to launch a nuclear weapon but they don't have to speak to anyone to
01:23:47
launch a nuclear weapon they don't have to have a meeting don't have to speak to the house or the Senate they Trump could turn around and say launch that nuke
01:23:54
yeah so could Biden so could you know Barack Obama so could George Bush or Ronald Reagan or you know let's go back
01:24:01
in in in time um look the Russians created um what was referred to as the
01:24:06
Dead Hand system right which took people completely out of the decision-making process I mean if you want to talk about
01:24:12
something that's that's even more frightening is let's remove humans from the decision to launch uh the nukes
01:24:17
what's the dead it was what it was referred to as it was the idea was during the Cold War um the idea was
01:24:24
Kremlin started sitting around thinking a little bit too much and they said well what happens if if there's a first
01:24:29
strike and we're taken out meaning the Kremlin meaning they leadership well H okay well we need some system in place
01:24:36
an automated system that will respond right um and so they created this system
01:24:43
that would luckily obviously never used but it was referred to as the Dead Hand system it was a it was a non-human um uh
01:24:52
decision-making process that would assess the Damage Done in the first uh
01:24:57
strike and would then make a decision on its own as to what to
01:25:02
do so that's a that's a problem but yes and and that's still there uh no it's
01:25:08
not there supposedly they they've you know advised us that it's been disarmed
01:25:14
some time ago um but you know again who knows I mean and and again that's another problem with AI and and you know
01:25:21
its ability uh to supplant humans you talk about drones and taking humans out
01:25:27
of drone strikes you can't you can't do that either you need to have you need to have that element I think in in any
01:25:34
weapon system but yeah Russia talking about and and um you know medev and
01:25:40
Dimitri pesov and and some of the other minions for Putin rattling the nuclear saber on on occasion uh doing their
01:25:47
tactical drills um you know obviously North Korea who has nuclear weapons here
01:25:54
well I mean the members of the nuclear Club um so I've got United States Russia France China the UK Pakistan Pakistan
01:26:01
India uh yep India Israel we don't know I mean that's a very I mean it's a great
01:26:08
point we assume but we don't know North Korea because they've never yeah North Korea yeah North Korea have got nuclear
01:26:13
weapons well uh they don't have a delivery system so they don't have a missile that can fire
01:26:20
right right and are they completely there is is up for grabs so that program
01:26:28
isn't quite as well understood uh the Iranian program is is a heavy lift in
01:26:33
terms of specific intelligence the breakout window is often discussed but it's anywhere from oh it's a couple of
01:26:39
weeks to it's months you know so that tells you because of the Gap and that and the parameters there that tells you that maybe the intelligence isn't as
01:26:45
good as it should be just to give a context on how powerful these weapons are there was a stat I read that said
01:26:50
the Warhead on one US nuclear armed submarine Marine has seven times the
01:26:56
destructive power of all the bombs dropped during World War II including
01:27:02
two atomic bombs combined and the US has 10 of those submarines MH yeah where are
01:27:09
we closer now to nuclear war than we've ever been in the last century no um I think we were closer in
01:27:18
the in the height of the Cold War I think um there it really was I mean it
01:27:23
was are you know top of Mind people literally thought we were going to get into a a a shooting match with the
01:27:31
Soviet Union and I think we were close on on occasion so I wouldn't argue that
01:27:38
we're it's more prevalent right and and by that I mean there's more of them um
01:27:43
than there were at that point there's more members of the nuclear Club um but
01:27:48
I that was at a point in time when I think we were much closer because also in part we there wasn't the
01:27:55
understanding the level of communication that exists there look there's still a lot of you know there's there's even
01:28:01
when it seems like two nations are at odds you know I think sometimes people don't understand how much communication
01:28:06
still exists off the radar between militaries between Intel organizations um people understand that
01:28:12
the the risk but I my point is when you talk about it a lot when you when you
01:28:18
threaten it you're you're normalizing it and I think that that could lead us down
01:28:23
a very bad path um and then if if the Iranian regime were to get nuclear
01:28:29
weapons um are they are they on the logic train
01:28:35
you know or do they view this as something that they they use as leverage to exert uh to get uh concessions from
01:28:42
Israel whatever those might be I I don't know I think there there would be an unknown player in that realm and I think
01:28:48
that causes some of this concern also as to why it's felt they shouldn't have it and also if they announce they announce
01:28:53
that they have a nuclear weapon then you can count on the Saudis saying to themselves me too right I'm I'm going to
01:29:00
get them so I'm not going to look the it's not as if the Saudis and the Iranians are are you know close friends
01:29:06
there becomes a Tipping Point here doesn't there where you know Iran gets their nuclear weapons Saudi want a nuclear weapon and then you know most of
01:29:12
the countries in this region and other parts of the world think well we need one now we need one and the Israelis maybe that's the moment when they come
01:29:18
out and say and confirm whether they do or don't and they're not going to confirm that they don't um yeah so I
01:29:23
think it there there's some real problems there look it's it's bad that anybody has them obviously everybody
01:29:28
wants peace but you have to deal with the world you got not the one you hope for it's interesting when I think about
01:29:34
the biggest risk to the world and I think about all the potential things that could happen we could have a solar
01:29:39
flare there could be I don't know whatever could happen there's a meteor of death too a meteor for that yeah
01:29:45
global warming could do it the thing that seems to be so obvious to me is if you get more and more nuclear weapons
01:29:50
and you've got more and more of these sometimes crazy egotistical leaders who
01:29:56
are aging and they're trying to hang on to their power and then you throw in AI which is a kind of sentient being that
01:30:02
can think for itself for me I go I don't know in the next hundred years there's got to be an incident there's got to be
01:30:10
an incident because like probabilistically this many weapons this many crazy leaders this much disruption
01:30:15
to technology you know people not wanting to let go of their power something's going to go wrong it might
01:30:20
be a mistake or something but all it takes is one missile to fly or one person to think that a missile's flying
01:30:27
right or you get one Broken Arrow uh you get one um one missing nuke right gets
01:30:33
in the wrong hands how about the story I think was it in Hawaii when Hawaii's missile detection system went off one
01:30:39
day and they thought that they were about to be hit by a yeah exactly think about what those people went through and it wasn't like a minute or two I I think
01:30:45
it I forget what the the length of time was before they got the all clear 30 minutes I think roughly yeah I mean
01:30:50
where everyone in Hawaii thought that a missile was about to them and I heard the stories of people trying to decide
01:30:56
which kid to go to and hiding in cupboards and going out on the beach and praying and and uh just so everyone
01:31:04
knows hiding in a Cupboard is not going to be and that was just because one person
01:31:09
in a office somewhere clicked the wrong button yeah and that sent that nation
01:31:14
into Panic so you can imagine in Iran someone accidentally clicking the wrong button or or deliberately clicking the wrong button or or whatever I just think
01:31:21
it's you get um look there's always this concern concern right I mean Russia has moved you know some of its Arsenal to
01:31:27
bellarus well you know okay what happens if you know one of those goes missing or
01:31:32
what happens if if a non-state actor uh organization gets a hold of one of
01:31:38
Pakistan so there's a complete Fallout in the Pakistan government and suddenly you've got a very hostile government
01:31:44
that you know has control so yeah it's it's it's an issue uh you have to ask yourself sometimes why would you want to
01:31:50
be a world leader what is your biggest concern as it relates to the map but also technology and the future that
01:31:56
we're heading towards what's your biggest concern I don't know that that's a that's a really interesting question and I know I should have like a a pat
01:32:03
answer right off the top of my head um I tend to I tend to look at at
01:32:12
uh the next big global conflict so I'm not so much I again don't get me wrong
01:32:17
these are bad right these potential flareups these problems this conflict here in the Middle East these are all bad people are suffering
01:32:24
but I think about the next actual global conflict and when that occurs right just
01:32:32
like another pandemic's going to happen right it's it's not like we're not going to get another pandemic um when the next
01:32:38
big global conflict occurs I think what we're going to find is that the pain has brought to the Homeland a lot quicker
01:32:46
right so what I mean by that is uh say you're in the US well we know that
01:32:54
Nations that don't necessarily have us interests at heart China let's let's let's focus on China because they are
01:33:00
you know close to the top of the Heap and they're motivated to get to the top um not again not saying it's going to be
01:33:05
a shooting match but the point being is every day uh the critical infrastructure critical systems in the US are being
01:33:12
tested and poked and prodded and looked at and mapped out and there's a reason
01:33:17
why that happens right so they're developing A playbook that says in the event that it should happen and we have
01:33:24
a global conflict we are going to shut down everything we can shut down in the US suddenly all power goes off your
01:33:32
water treatment facilities aren't working you can't move fuel around you can't get fuel Pharmaceuticals aren't
01:33:38
being delivered no food is being delivered can't get cash out whether you want cash or not at that point um the
01:33:44
idea being is we're going to bring the pain to the Homeland right immediately that's what you want to do and will
01:33:49
there be a a Connecticut element will you actually have a shooting match with you know troops on around yeah I'm not
01:33:55
sure that ever goes away but the next global conflict is going to be fought in a way that that we have a hard time
01:34:01
understanding and then it'll be up in space as well they've you know the Chinese have spent a great deal of effort on uh directed energy weapons and
01:34:09
one of the points of that is essentially to knock out Satellite Systems right you think about you take away take away
01:34:15
satellite structures you know whether it's starlink or or any of the satellite systems up there you shut down GPS right
01:34:21
people can't move you shut down the internet my God people are losing Lo their minds right um can't do Tick Tock
01:34:27
and uh so it's you know not to make light of it because we're talking about
01:34:32
a different type of warfare and so that's kind of the thing that I worry
01:34:38
about if you if you said what are people really worry about well yeah top concerns always you know China and Russia and Iran but it's the
01:34:45
infrastructure and it's a way that it's going to be brought to the Homeland that's going to create I think a level
01:34:50
of pain that most people aren't going to be willing to put up with for very long
01:34:55
when you say they're going to bring pain to the Homeland were you saying the US were going to shut down their
01:35:01
infrastructure no I'm I'm saying that whoever again I'm just as a u it could be any you know it could be the EU in a
01:35:07
conflict it could be the US and nato in a conflict with another but the point being is that you know they don't they
01:35:13
don't map out infrastructure for for no reason at all who's mapping the infrastructure uh well Russia China okay
01:35:18
there might be our infrastructure our infrastructure we're doing the same thing people always say they say well you're doing the same well you better
01:35:24
hope that whether it's the UK or whether it's Australia whether it's us that you hope that we're engaged in the same
01:35:30
activities because that's where this is is is going to end up going um having said that you know if someone had said
01:35:36
we're going to be engaged in a massive land War World War I Style with with trenches and very little ground gain and
01:35:43
and lots of bombardment over people would said nah that's never going to happen again but that's happening in Ukraine right now it's happening in
01:35:49
Ukraine you can go you know the Imperial War Museum in London which is a wonderful Museum they've got a World War
01:35:54
I exhibit and you go through the World War I exhibit and you you you look at it and
01:36:00
you realize the same thing is taking place you look at the aerial photographs of the front line and you see the trench
01:36:05
lines here in in in Ukraine it's it's stunning and we're just making the same
01:36:11
mistakes over again it's funny how history has a strange way of repeating itself yeah because we don't we like to think that we learn but we're dealing
01:36:18
with the same old humans with the same old emotions and Egos and ideologies and stuff over and over again so it's
01:36:25
because humans haven't changed you're right you're absolutely yeah that's right how are how are you preparing on a personal level if if you're seeing that
01:36:31
some of these a lot of guns and ammo really no I'm kidding well no I'm not kidding but that's not how I'm preparing
01:36:37
I just like to you know load up because you're saying you don't believe Americans and you know westerners really
01:36:43
understand how the next big global conflict will look yeah so is there a way they can
01:36:49
prepare for such a conflict well well on one level uh
01:36:54
you know people need to read as much as they can and and pay attention right I mean get as many different sources of
01:37:00
information don't just read one outlet that you happen to agree with um but you
01:37:05
know try to be as informed as possible um which uh you know I think sometimes
01:37:12
it's difficult to do because we're all busy right we're all putting food on the table and trying to take care of families and whatever but um so I think
01:37:20
there's there's an element of of folks just trying to be informed and then you know that would be look I
01:37:27
mean the pandemic that occurred the covid-19 thing if if people were really really
01:37:34
watching what was going on you know October 2019 right there was you there's
01:37:40
this weird situation going on in China a couple of cities were were quarantined
01:37:45
and that started to Bubble Up and and people were paying attention to it I I was getting notifications about you know
01:37:50
what the hell's going on in China um well before there was any Declaration of
01:37:56
a problem right and so and and and the Wuhan lab was mentioned
01:38:01
repeatedly um so I think just being informed is one of the best things that people can do and then you know I'm not
01:38:09
a prepper um but it's always good just to you know be prepared for a natural
01:38:16
crisis right power goes out because there's a blackout fine you know there's a you know whatever the reason may be um
01:38:23
just just be a little aware of and have a plan of some sort that says if there is a natural disaster not saying a
01:38:30
shooting match then what do I do what's my C plan I got kids at school how do I reach them we're so unprepared because
01:38:36
in our lifetimes we've never had a war so we I grew up I'm about 32 years old
01:38:41
now I assume Wars happen in other places they don't happen in the UK or in LA or
01:38:47
New York they happen over there so I'm comfortable and I'm complacent to some
01:38:52
degree MH like I could never imagine even a adversarial plane flying over my city yeah there's a there's a level of
01:39:00
uh We've we've all gotten we've all gotten I don't want to say soft necessarily but look every
01:39:06
generation wants it to be easier right my parents uh were older when they had
01:39:11
me they they were born in 1919 and 1920 right and they went through the um you
01:39:19
know the tough times Economic Times They went through you know a couple of wars um they wanted it better for their kids
01:39:27
right now you know their parents my grandparents wanted it better for them
01:39:32
right and so on and so you that's human nature you want to be doing the best for your kids you want it to be better for
01:39:38
that generation I think eventually you reach uh diminishing returns right and I
01:39:44
do worry that that's kind of where we're at I you know I look at my own kids and look nobody's out there you know in in
01:39:50
in here or over here or whatever there's there's certainly places in the world where that's not true but you know the
01:39:56
these areas here that we're talking about we're not out worrying about whether we can collect enough food and clean water necessarily you know we're
01:40:03
worried about um you is my Wi-Fi signal strong enough but it's interesting when you were talking about Israel earlier
01:40:09
you said how Israel had got a bit comfortable so they started infighting right and what you're seeing over in the
01:40:16
United States and other parts of Europe is infighting it's like we've got nothing better to do so we're arguing over identity politics and are getting
01:40:23
more woke and it's more divided because I don't know it's like we have nothing better to do right and also that's being
01:40:28
fueled look they you never want to underestimate the impact of the disinformation campaigns run by I mean
01:40:34
again I keep going I sound like I'm just constantly throwing out the same bogey man but look it's that's the way the world is China Russia in particular Iran
01:40:41
has proven itself to be very Adept at this at disinformation campaigns that prey on whether it's in in the EU or
01:40:48
whether it's in the US or elsewhere that prey on what they view as vulnerabilities so it goes back to what
01:40:53
we were talking about before about recruiting an asset right or identifying weaknesses and leverage well they look
01:40:58
at the US and they go you know what if we if we kind of just keep poking at that racist issue we keep you know poking it at woke issues right I mean
01:41:06
that's very divisive and it's and it does right it works so the next thing you know they're they're putting
01:41:11
together a a a bot they're throwing out some misinformation or disinformation on on X someone looks at that and goes yeah
01:41:18
that's that's right then they just forward it on to their friends and their family and it just keeps building so the
01:41:24
the the those campaigns have a a real significant impact on on on the west
01:41:30
because we're not inclined for whatever reason we're not curious enough or we don't have enough time or whatever to
01:41:37
look at a piece of information and go is this even credible what you say to people that think that's just completely
01:41:42
impossible it's a conspiracy theory there's no way China and Russia are involved in misinformation there's no
01:41:47
way they're trying to tear us apart yeah uh you know what all they need to do is is a little uh fact-based research spend
01:41:54
a little time they don't have to look at one side or another look across the board at at at a variety of of uh uh
01:42:00
think tanks and research institutes that that focus on this sort of thing and no
01:42:05
there's look there's there is no doubt there is a a a concerted effort to
01:42:11
influence whether it's an election and and they're not trying necessarily to get anybody to win they're just trying to undermine the the the the concept of
01:42:18
democracy they want to create some chaos that that's from their perspective that's a win so do you know Russia
01:42:23
wanted Trump to win that's a good question I don't know if they did I think they've made a mistake or they've
01:42:28
calculated wrong here because I know there's sort of a Trope out there that says well he's Putin's puppet well we
01:42:34
also have to remember that was a very large disinformation campaign or misinformation campaign you know I don't
01:42:40
want to make it sound more nefarious but people swallowed that Hook Line and Sinker and then ran with it right over
01:42:46
this idea that uh oh my God look at the dossier so I think um I you know there's
01:42:54
there's sort of this narrative that says okay well yeah Putin definitely wanted Trump to win because Trump's going to completely get out of Ukraine I don't
01:42:59
think that's going to happen um and you know there's already been reporting that he had a call with uh with Putin already
01:43:05
now the Kremlin saying oh that call never happened but according to Western reporting he had a call and he said you
01:43:11
are not to to uh intensify this War uh and then basically setting down a marker
01:43:17
now again we won't know until we know until you know he gets out there and he starts you know putting more people in
01:43:23
place I'm very curious to see who he puts in in at the Pentagon at sorry at
01:43:28
the defense department but um because if I was Putin I know Trump has ran his
01:43:34
whole campaign saying he's gonna end this war and if I'm Putin I go that means that I don't have to throw more
01:43:40
men at the front line I can get my economy back Putin also wants to end this war but Trump if Trump doesn't end
01:43:46
that war in the next four years the Democrats are going to get in because they're going to say you said you were
01:43:52
going to end the war with out there fighting you said you're going to end this but think about it if he does end the war then they're going to say well
01:43:58
yeah that's because you know you and Putin like each other and and yeah and you gave away you know some Ukrainian
01:44:03
territory well the reality is look Putin he he annexed crimeia during Obama's
01:44:11
administration he invaded during Biden's Administration he knew what he had he knew what the response was going to be
01:44:18
now now look people say well you know Biden you know to his credit you know he kind of rallied and he pushed for more
01:44:23
support and yes that's absolutely true but Putin engaged in this during his
01:44:29
time right because I think he knew or he felt he knew maybe that's more important
01:44:34
he felt he knew what he was going to get now he wasn't anticipating that NATO response was going to be his Hardline
01:44:40
and that's a good thing I'm glad that Biden has done that Biden has also
01:44:45
withheld authorization to use long range Munitions to Target Russian military
01:44:51
sites that are being used to Target Target Ukraine right now you could argue that until Putin feels some pain or
01:44:57
Ukraine is in a better offensive position of some sort that you can't get people to the negotiating table and
01:45:03
again if you want to end the conflict you're probably going to want to do that uh unless you just want Putin to overrun
01:45:08
Ukraine if you want to if you want that to happen then stop support and that's what's going to happen but I think you
01:45:14
know the the the narrative I think is a little bit off I'm not because yeah you're right if if the war continues
01:45:21
right I'm not sure the Democrats have as much you know to to play off of but I think if if the war is ended then I
01:45:28
think what they'll say is H you gave it away acting as if somehow Ukraine could
01:45:33
have won and gained all their territory back which is unrealistic I think it's more more compelling to say we stopped
01:45:39
all the wars and I think for Americans right now I think they want to look we saved your money we stopped sending billions there we stopped the war people
01:45:45
aren't dying anymore I think that's much more compelling narrative then I don't think Americans care as as much this is
01:45:51
a guess about giving away a little piece yeah okay I yeah I was I you're right I
01:45:56
that was my mistake I think you're you're right in the sense that um if the war is still ongoing yeah the Dems have
01:46:02
the Democrats you lied you said you shut it down in day one yeah no I see what you're saying from an electoral perspective down the road uh four years
01:46:09
from now wow 2028 so if I'm Putin I'm going I know Trump he's got he's incentivized to stop this thing and you
01:46:16
know I can so that that puts me in a stronger position because if Trump doesn't stop it then maybe Eric Trump's
01:46:22
not going to get in next year or whoever or JD Vance is yeah I mean I think Putin also I think is smart enough to to
01:46:28
realize to remember that um it was the Trump Administration that authorized
01:46:33
lethal Aid to Ukraine to begin with uh the back during Obama Biden years they
01:46:39
did not authorize lethal Aid into Ukraine and despite um despite uh
01:46:46
apparently crime annexation was going to be a red line and it wasn't there's no safe like a Simply Safe the sponsor of
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right now and remember there's no safe like a Simply Safe we mentioned disinformation Tik Tok mhm I mean Tik
01:48:31
Tok has ties to China has Origins to China right do you think Tik Tok
01:48:37
is the the interesting thing about Tik Tok so I worked in social media for 10 years is Tik Tok as a platform the
01:48:43
algorithm is so unbelievably a addictive um what how
01:48:49
would I describe it I guess the word is the algorithm is so powerful and you notice this anyone that uses Tik Tok
01:48:55
you'll notice this because if you post something on your page and you have a million followers the post could either get a th000 views or 10 million views
01:49:03
and when when I think about algorithms the variance in views you're getting basically are an expression of how
01:49:08
powerful the algorithm is so on Instagram say you have a million followers and you post something the
01:49:14
variance between how many views you're going to get is quite low but on Tik Tok it's wide so what the algorithm is doing
01:49:19
is it's saying take that and show everyone take this show no one and what
01:49:25
this means is that the so this is why it's so addictive to young people because everything they're seeing is
01:49:30
really really interesting stuff and they care a lot less about how many followers you have and it's more about is this
01:49:36
really really interesting so as a as a platform it's super addictive it can put you in an echo chamber faster than
01:49:43
anything because if I'm looking at videos about I don't know X it's going to keep showing me the most interesting
01:49:48
emotional fear Centric videos about that thing no boring yeah you're going to see no boring so do you think there's a
01:49:53
chance that Tik Tok is is being used by one of our foreign adversaries to divide us oh sure yeah I think I think social
01:50:00
media is look in the old days if you wanted to influence hearts and Minds if you wanted to change uh uh say you were
01:50:06
interested in in uh turning the population in where Kenya you know Nigeria ner um then it was kind of old
01:50:16
school stuff right you would how am I going to get um information out there I'm going to I'm going to recruit a
01:50:22
bunch of journalists right local journalists and I'm going to get them to publish stories right maybe there's a radio station I'll recruit somebody who
01:50:29
can put stories on the radio technology has given uh the ability to do covert
01:50:35
action campaigns um propaganda disinformation whatever you want to call it um you know a real jump start right
01:50:43
so the concept is the same I'm trying to influence opinion I'm trying to you know get viewers whatever it is um trying to
01:50:51
change hearts and Minds but uh you can do it much faster right
01:50:56
and and that's the type of thing the us would have done to their adversaries right the US would literally send a
01:51:04
entrepreneur undercover into these countries to start a perfectly legitimate business with his family
01:51:10
they'd find a way to potentially fund it in some way to make sure it was successful and he might be starting a
01:51:16
social media app in Russia undercover like that's the type of thing the CIA and other you know maybe m
01:51:23
other would do it's um you're looking for ways to I mean you wouldn't
01:51:28
necessarily want to say okay I'm going to go into China I'm going to go into Russia and start a a business right because now that's that's problematic
01:51:34
from an operational perspective right but you're going to use the technology for sure to get to as many eyeballs as
01:51:42
possible and so yes I mean you know Tik tok's a a great example of that there's
01:51:47
a reason why you Chinese citizens can't access Tik Tok inside China right I mean
01:51:53
if you think about that is this is Tik Tok you know uh is is it uh is it beneficial to our kids well if it was
01:52:01
Tik Tok could probably be available inside China uh but it's not um it's a
01:52:06
it's it's a tough one I we deal with that on a personal level all the time trying to you know figure out how much screen time you know and what the what
01:52:13
the kids can access now they're getting older so it's you know you're kind of fighting a losing battle on that one
01:52:19
some people think that there's like a back Channel where t um China are harvesting data from the back end of Tik
01:52:24
Tok in some way and I you know much like you I'm less likely to believe those
01:52:30
kinds of conspiracy theories but one theory that makes logical sense to me is if I was China and I wanted to sew
01:52:36
division in the United States what I would do is make an make an app a social media app that has a really really
01:52:43
powerful device of algorithm which really really is strong and I would just make it succeed in the country I don't
01:52:49
need the data because what as you said what I'm going to do is I'm going to Pop I would say yes that's that's the
01:52:56
that's a a good point and you see that based on what you're saying I don't have anywhere near the level of understanding of of the app world but but you see that
01:53:04
when you you know um just say okay oh I'm interested in that look at that
01:53:09
there's a protest over here right next thing you know you're getting you know 40 protest uh videos or whatever um but
01:53:16
I would say also they still want data right they they thrive on collecting
01:53:23
Mass amounts of information and so um you know I again I I'm don't know that
01:53:30
that Tech world uh well enough to to get into a conversation about that but it is
01:53:36
it is clear based on their uh economic Espionage and efforts over the past that
01:53:42
they love nothing better than to collect as much information as possible and it doesn't even have to be on a Target that
01:53:48
you think know no wonder they're they're targeting Ron or they're targeting a company that makes sense they'll go
01:53:53
after anybody really um and it is yeah so I but I I think for the most part
01:54:00
when you talk about um social media what I worry about the most is this tendency
01:54:06
for people not to question not to be cynical or not to be at least curious
01:54:11
and say where's this come from and if they if if everyone would just do that because there is no other defense at the
01:54:18
end of the day you don't want the government telling you what you can see and what you can't see I don't think anyway but there's no there's no other
01:54:25
defense in the front line which is the individual with their smartphone looking at something and saying and then
01:54:31
stopping for at least a moment to say where's this information coming from is it credible let me check uh elsewhere
01:54:37
before I send this on to my family right and create you know more conflict just
01:54:43
just take the time to be quizzical it's difficult because we all have like confirmation bias right so we're we're
01:54:48
looking for what we want to believe true and so it's just thinking about that you just see it you saw it in this election
01:54:54
cycle if that is what I wanted to believe and what I think is um right then I think that's true and I will
01:55:00
share that and you see it in the election cycle as someone who is this sort of outside Observer I'm watching
01:55:06
disinformation on both sides I'm watching them lie about Trump and I'm watching them lie about Kamala on both sides and I'm watching it happen and
01:55:12
going oh no that's a lie that's a lie that's a lie that's a lie that's a lie but both sides are enraged and they think they're the the sort of Bastion of
01:55:18
truth it's so interesting but the the hard edges are are equally problematic right and the problem we have is you
01:55:24
know much much like the conflict in Ukraine on the front lines in the trenches there people are sitting in
01:55:31
their trenches throwing hand grenades at each other and there's nobody living in the middle anymore right and you know
01:55:37
it's almost become a a nasty word to say compromise but I don't know how you get meaningful things done you know without
01:55:44
the ability to listen to to both sides and say okay well that that idea actually kind of makes sense or that
01:55:50
idea doesn't make sense but but at least to work together but nobody is in the center for the most part or if they are
01:55:55
they don't make any noise right random idea random thought I just had um Scott Gallow was on my podcast and he said
01:56:01
there's a 33% chance that Trump dies in office based on his age in BMI like statistically he's he's the age
01:56:09
he's at and the the BMI he has there's a 33% chance he dies while he's in the next four years I just
01:56:15
wonder what that might do to this whole thing because if if Trump drops dead one day in the United States people aren't
01:56:22
going to believe that was innocent the destabilizer I just you know the one of the one of the best
01:56:29
results that came out of this election was the size of the result right that was important regardless of who won and
01:56:36
you know I had I don't know how many conversations with a variety of people on the you know on both sides of the spectrum of the politics and and they
01:56:42
all kind of felt the same way which was okay well whoever wins I just hope it's convincing so that we don't then
01:56:48
struggle with this over the next four years um but you're right we what
01:56:54
happens in the next four years I've got my own theory of how it plays out but yeah um I think um Again
01:57:02
part of it depends on on how good the Democrat party is at at introspection not very good not very good I don't
01:57:09
think so uh but I don't think it's it's still the government right it's still
01:57:14
the US government and we have to remember people are you know they're very upset about the idea that oh my God
01:57:19
you know maybe the Republicans have all three they have the white they have the Congress they have the Senate um but
01:57:24
that's been the case for many going back I don't know how many administrations but several at
01:57:30
least five or six where the president started out with control of both houses and so you know the lesson from that
01:57:36
usually is that uh not a lot really gets done it's still a very large machine and
01:57:42
so I know people are you know look they they spent people spent a long time
01:57:48
saying if Trump wins it's the end of Life as we know it it's the end of democracy oh my my God this is going to
01:57:53
be and then you know a day and a half later President Biden you know comes out and goes you know we're going to be just
01:57:59
fine then people are like well what the [ __ ] was all that talk about the end of the world then right it's politics it's
01:58:05
a narrative but it's gotten so um hyperbolic there's just like this you
01:58:11
have to take it to the far extreme no matter what you're saying right and so then now people have a hard time absorbing that well but you told me to
01:58:17
to go out in the street and Rend my clothing and cry and Nash my teeth and and now you're telling it's going to be okay what you know so I think we're
01:58:25
going to be just fine and we would have been just fine if we had the other it's a very resilient Nation it's a despite
01:58:33
these things that we've been talking about it's a pretty resilient world right so um I think you know there's not
01:58:39
going to be we're not going to see 10 million people deported for instance right I don't I don't think that's going
01:58:44
to happen will we have a tougher border policy will there be some deportations yes will they start with uh folks who
01:58:51
are in the country illegally who have committed crimes well yes is that a problem uh I I don't know is anyone
01:58:58
upset if someone who's got a criminal convictions and is here illegally is deported you know I guess maybe there's
01:59:05
maybe there's some issue there but um you know is so I
01:59:10
think we tend to get so over the top on whether we're talking about left or
01:59:15
right that the reality is usually there's not the sea change that
01:59:23
people anticipate so I think we're going to be okay that's why I I'm still I'm
01:59:28
optimistic that this next Administration will hold the line realizing that holding the line is the best way to get
01:59:36
folks to the table to come up with a settlement in Ukraine and Russia in Ukraine and Russia sorry exactly and you
01:59:43
know again I'm more cynical about this region just because I think nobody really wants to deal with the Iranian
01:59:49
regime and so fine yes we get ceasefires doesn't mean anything in the long term no we'll be dealing with this conflict
01:59:56
you know our kids will be dealing with this conflict um so I'm a little bit more reluctant to to say happy things
02:00:03
about that um anyway kids just to close off if you were had to give your
02:00:09
children advice on how to be successful based on everything you learned at your time in the CIA on how to climb whatever
02:00:16
ladder that they aspire to climb in their life what would you say to them uh well I'll tell you what I do say to them which is
02:00:23
my job as a parent is not to raise uh average kids there's enough
02:00:30
mediocrity uh out there right my job is to raise exceptional children and that
02:00:36
means they have to not give it 150% I don't know what that is and people talk
02:00:42
about that you got to give 110% but you have to work a little bit harder than everyone else right and your gain your
02:00:51
result is is that much more it's it's it's it's really shocking you just have
02:00:56
to work a little bit harder and you can always do a little bit more than you think you can do right um it's hard to
02:01:02
explain that to kids because they think they're bulletproof they think they've got uh you know 2,000 years ahead of
02:01:08
them they they don't understand how time passes but if it's if it's one thing I
02:01:13
tell them I mean aside from the basics you know just be honest be loyal uh be kind um it's this idea you just you have
02:01:21
have to put in the effort and if you do you can I don't want to say you can do anything you you probably don't have the
02:01:27
genetic build of LeBron James right so you're probably not probably not doing what he's doing
02:01:33
but that's that's it it's and and I always felt it's just it's it's a it's a
02:01:38
simple thing but if I've learned one thing in in whether it was in the agency or out all you got to do is work a
02:01:45
little bit harder what about people advice you give them to you know cuz I
02:01:51
spoke to Andre bustan in the podcast and he talks about motivation and manipulation being two sides of the same coin when you think about what stands in
02:01:58
the way of your life when you think about the sort of geopolitical issues where we were describing it's all just
02:02:03
people your business at the moment is people my business is people even doing
02:02:08
this podcast it's trying to understand people um one of the things I got from you which I think is just really
02:02:14
unappreciated is just the remarkable power of just list listening and let letting someone else talk so you can
02:02:20
understand them is there anything else you think about if you're trying to create a good sales person um as it
02:02:26
relates to people you can't I suppose a psychotic
02:02:32
or could but you you can't fake um empathy you can't fake um real interest
02:02:39
right you can't fake um uh enjoyment of people right and and I I do think folks
02:02:48
even if they're not trained they're they're they're pretty good at spotting that bad right there pretty good spotting if people are being uh
02:02:55
disingenuous so um it's it's really it's really that
02:03:01
I mean you have to with with I mean I don't want to dwell too much on business but in that
02:03:08
world when I'm talking to my folks um I just know some of them aren't going to
02:03:14
enjoy the process of sales if we're talking about sales they're not going to enjoy going out and doing business development but they do an amazing job
02:03:21
on the other as ects of the work right and all that work keeps clients coming back right so it's horses for courses I
02:03:28
you know I I think you know people are made up differently and and you can't ask everyone to do the same thing um the
02:03:36
only things you can control I keep going back to the same thing with because I keep thinking about my kids now that we talked about them is they can't like the
02:03:43
middle boy you know he plays basketball it's all he wants to do he plays basketball he goes to an academy down in
02:03:48
Florida IMG which is an amazing place and it's a sports academy for the most
02:03:54
part um and he can't control how tall he is
02:03:59
right how how I mean he can work on how fast he is I suppose but you know those sort of things but he can control how
02:04:05
hard he works and he can always work harder than the next guy you you think about it I've been in situations before
02:04:11
where I thought I cannot take one more step and then you think well yeah I can take one more step right it's not it's I
02:04:17
know again this is not an epiphany but people forget that right people
02:04:22
sometimes lose sight in part because they're not pushed or they're not challenged or the circumstances mean
02:04:28
that they don't have to be pushed or Challenge and so people get away from understanding exactly what they're capable of accomplishing if they really
02:04:35
think about it so that's all I I all I ask for my folks is is you know be honest work hard um keep the clients
02:04:43
happy and you know Bob's your uncle but um you know people right now are going Mike that's it that's your advice Bob's
02:04:49
your uncle you said you like you like you think life is much more simple than most
02:04:55
people portray and I think hard work is definitely one of those things that um is both controllable and it creates such
02:05:01
a disproportionate winning advantage that's exactly right that's a much more elegant way than if you're not I'm to
02:05:07
I'm going to steal that but it does yeah but it's it does
02:05:12
and and it's not sexy because who wants [ __ ] hard work people want tricks and TI there's got to be some so what do you
02:05:18
do how do you how do you tell if somebody's like no just you know what just yeah unass the sofa work a little bit harder and you're right it's not a
02:05:24
popular thing to say um but I think people are capable of it and more so than they realize we have a closing
02:05:31
tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next not knowing who they're leaving it for and the question that's been left for you is
02:05:37
what do you think is the most important thing that has happened in your life to create your
02:05:46
success wow you obviously have some smart guests on here I'm I'm already
02:05:51
jumped to the next point where I'm like ah what's your favorite
02:05:57
color um you know what the thing I would have to
02:06:02
say um this is going to sound what's it going to sound like I
02:06:07
don't know I think I um
02:06:14
had I think I had the probably the best parents that you could ask for I had my
02:06:21
dad was an amazing individual amazing individual
02:06:27
and they I think more than anything right if I I have to go all the way back
02:06:32
look meeting my my wife Emily I mean she's the smartest person I know uh the funniest person I know so but you know I
02:06:39
met her you know going on 20 years ago now so what happened before the 20 years and what happened leading through if I
02:06:46
you know if I said that then you know the first half of my life I think it was my parents right and no doubt about it my dad uh was just uh such a uh role
02:06:55
model and and just laid a foundation um
02:07:00
but I would say then the next half would definitely be uh my wife I think it's
02:07:06
that's what does it as the people what was the model that your dad left you part of it was the work ethic my dad
02:07:13
worked hard um and he he never complained right he he didn't and he and
02:07:22
he loved my mother just they were married for 50 years and that was part of it too is I was fortunate I was
02:07:29
blessed and and I realize it's it's you know a lot of people come from very different circumstances but I came from
02:07:34
one of those families where I was there was never in question my father was fiercely loyal uh to my mother and she
02:07:41
was fiercely loyal to him and um and and and loyalty um I think plays
02:07:50
an important role in in what you're doing I think people people see that as
02:07:55
something that they can count on right and that sets you up for Success too I think so I would say that was that was
02:08:04
uh that was probably again the first half of my life I would say that's what that's what paved the way and then uh
02:08:11
meeting Emily I completely out kicked my coverage as they say yeah did your dad
02:08:17
know how much you appreciated the model of what it is to be a man that you he said you yeah yeah I feel good about
02:08:25
um I remember thinking about that when he died I remember thinking that
02:08:35
uh I remember thinking that I was very happy that that I had told him sorry
02:08:40
that I had told him what I thought of him right we were very we we were very
02:08:45
good with each other in terms of talking about what we felt um and how uh we
02:08:51
appre appreciated each other and that's that's a really good thing cuz I don't think you want someone to go and you
02:08:57
think well I should have said that I should have said should have said something different um I was lucky you
02:09:03
know he uh you know we we had a we had a really good
02:09:09
dialogue yeah where does that emotion come from you just you know there it's it's I
02:09:16
think it's that's that's Humanity it's just how you feel right and and your your
02:09:25
experiences um you know all my experiences with you know my dad were
02:09:31
just solid you know just going out just doing things just getting together just
02:09:36
meeting up as as you know when when uh you know I was older and I'd come I'd
02:09:42
come back to the States for you know a few days and we get together and and uh
02:09:48
you know just like there was there was a a b there that was just really solid and
02:09:54
I feel the same way with I've you know I've got brothers and they're all older than I am um and you know that's that's
02:10:01
that's a tight relationship right so yeah I think it's it's good I don't I don't get uh I don't get emotional about
02:10:09
much but but family I do um because at the end of the day nobody nobody's going
02:10:14
to write on my Tombstone that I worked my ass off right or that I was a I was a
02:10:20
real solid you know officer or that you know I sure built a really nice business it's not
02:10:26
going to matter it's you know all I care about is his family and friends if you could write something on his
02:10:33
Tombstone what would you write thanks I don't know what else you
02:10:41
would say you know just thank you um you
02:10:47
know I did write a little little note he was in his uniform when we buried him
02:10:53
and uh I wrote a little note and tucked it in his in his uniform pocket um but
02:10:59
that's between me and him so but I appreciate you bringing
02:11:05
this up it's nice I mean it is nice to talk I would you know I love talking about the family um but uh yeah that's
02:11:13
that's it it's it's not a you know it's probably not the probably not the the most dynamic answer you get from that
02:11:19
question I suppose people have more more um more interesting answers but I don't
02:11:27
know you know one that would be more meaningful so anyway I think it's a perfectly I
02:11:34
think it's a wonderful answer because it says so much about your values and where you've come from and what's driving you
02:11:40
and the man that you are and your priorities because it's so clear how much he meant to you and and it's
02:11:46
evident to me how you must be paying that forward as a man to your children as well
02:11:51
um in any way that you possibly can and I think if we understand especially for men I think if we understand the role model that our fathers set us we we
02:11:58
understand what we think is important and what we think is right yeah because my same with my father my father and my
02:12:04
mother didn't get on but one of the things I'll always remember was even In the Heat of their like
02:12:10
conflicts if she needed something mid argument he would do it he never left
02:12:16
because of the kids and so there there was clearly a principle in my father where
02:12:22
there was something more important than the argument and that is the family the love and the taking care of of your
02:12:28
woman yeah so even now when I'm in a relationship if I'm in an argument with my girlfriend or we're disagreeing about
02:12:34
something I will always know that there's something more important which is my responsibility to take care of these people right you and that came
02:12:40
from my dad that's exactly right that's that's exactly right yeah you have to know when to bend your spear right and
02:12:47
you just I think um yeah I I I think that's if you can if you can pass that sense of
02:12:56
of uh whatever it is of loyalty of of appreciation of Duty of um of hard work
02:13:03
of honesty if you can pass that along to your kids you know you've done your job that's why I say it's it's and
02:13:10
that's what I mean by I'm not here to raise average kids I don't mean like I've got to raise you know multi-millionaire so I've got to you
02:13:17
know that's not what I'm talking about I'm talking about their their character and how they deal with the
02:13:23
world Mike thank you thank you for doing what you do it's um as I said before we started recording I'm someone that's
02:13:28
quite naive to these issues and uh part of that is because I'm very busy doing my own thing so I I try not to talk
02:13:35
about these things that I don't understand but the way that you deliver the the information through your book through your podcast and even here today
02:13:41
and on all the shows that I've seen you on is incredibly important because it's so accessible thank you um and that
02:13:47
means that people like me can gain a better understanding of what's happening in the world and then make you know better decisions for my life but what
02:13:53
you know who I'm voting for and why I'm voting for them um which are consequential to all of us and that's a very noble noble cause thaning so thank
02:14:00
you I know thank you I've enjoyed the hell out of this conversation I really really have and and uh it's gone by very
02:14:06
quickly and I apologize for marking up your map it's all good thank you [Music]
02:14:13
Mike I'm going to let you into a little bit of a secret you're probably going to think me and my team are a little bit weird but I can still remember to this
02:14:20
day when Jima from my team posted on slack that she Chang the scent in this studio and right after she posted it the
02:14:26
entire office clapped in our slack Channel and this might sound crazy but at the DI ofo this is the type of 1%
02:14:32
Improvement we make on our show and that is why the show is the Way It Is by understanding the power of compounding
02:14:38
1% you can absolutely change your outcomes in your life it isn't about drastic Transformations or quick wins
02:14:45
it's about the small consistent actions that have a lasting change in your outcomes so so 2 years ago we started
02:14:52
the process of creating this beautiful diary and it's truly beautiful inside there's lots of pictures lots of
02:14:57
inspiration and motivation as well some interact developments and the purpose of this diary is to help you identify stay
02:15:05
focused on develop consistency with the 1% that will ultimately change your life
02:15:10
we're only going to do a limited run of these Diaries so if you want one for yourself or for a friend or for a colleague or for your team then head to
02:15:16
the diary.com right now I'll link it below
02:15:21
oh [Music]
02:15:39
[Music]

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Episode Highlights

  • Mike Baker's Journey from CIA to Business
    Mike Baker shares his transition from CIA officer to corporate intelligence expert, revealing insights on espionage and business.
    “I started with the CIA at an early age, not necessarily expecting to start with the CIA.”
    @ 02m 11s
    November 28, 2024
  • The Art of Recruitment
    Baker discusses the psychology behind recruiting assets and the complexities involved in espionage.
    “You're looking for people with access who are inclined to talk.”
    @ 15m 32s
    November 28, 2024
  • The Role of Risk in Business
    Understanding your risk appetite is essential for making informed decisions.
    @ 28m 40s
    November 28, 2024
  • The Importance of Decision-Making
    In both life and business, making timely decisions is crucial. Don't get bogged down in overthinking.
    “Just make a damn decision!”
    @ 31m 18s
    November 28, 2024
  • The Complexity of Ukraine's Situation
    Understanding the historical context of Ukraine's defense against Russia is crucial.
    “It's an incredible moment in time.”
    @ 51m 25s
    November 28, 2024
  • Iran's Threats and Regional Instability
    Iran's regime continues to pose a serious threat to Israel and regional stability.
    “Their objective is to wipe Israel from the face of the Earth.”
    @ 01h 08m 13s
    November 28, 2024
  • US-Israel Relations
    Support for Israel remains strong due to historical ties and the Jewish American community.
    “You can't say the same thing about Ukraine.”
    @ 01h 16m 02s
    November 28, 2024
  • Nuclear Weapons Concerns
    The normalization of nuclear weapon use is alarming, especially with aging leaders.
    “You have to deal with the world you got, not the one you hope for.”
    @ 01h 29m 28s
    November 28, 2024
  • The Next Global Conflict
    Experts discuss the potential for a new global conflict and its implications for infrastructure.
    “The next global conflict is going to be fought in a way that we have a hard time understanding.”
    @ 01h 33m 55s
    November 28, 2024
  • TikTok's Influence
    The addictive nature of TikTok and its potential use as a tool for division is examined.
    “TikTok is a great example of how technology can influence opinion.”
    @ 01h 51m 42s
    November 28, 2024
  • Raising Exceptional Children
    The speaker emphasizes the importance of raising kids who strive for excellence, not mediocrity.
    “My job is to raise exceptional children.”
    @ 02h 00m 30s
    November 28, 2024
  • The Role of Family
    A heartfelt reflection on the importance of family and the values passed down from parents.
    “All I care about is family and friends.”
    @ 02h 10m 20s
    November 28, 2024

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Risk Assessment28:40
  • Geopolitical Mindset46:25
  • Isolationist Attitudes47:47
  • Negotiated Settlements56:23
  • China's 2049 Plan58:12
  • Loyalty and Responsibility2:12:47
  • 1% Improvement2:14:32
  • Beautiful Diary2:14:52

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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