Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
who's the real spy is it
Manning who revealed that information and Eunos called
trader by a lot of people say oh my god
the revealed the sensitive classified information
and he put on the Internet in our enemies might have gotten it so you want
to getting a sentence of thirty five years
well let's take a look at some actual spies from our past then actually from
the present as well
and see the time that they got to the some some hard core guys
um William column allay got 16 years old
explain all their case in a second david henrie Barnett
got 18 years Clayton lonetree thirty years
Carole James Nicholson the actually was the
most senior CIA official ever convicted
of spying for another country only got twenty three years
/url Edwin pets got twenty seven years obviously as you can see there
every single one of them less than men
so now let me tell you what they did
remember mating reveals information because he says
I want to the american public to know about it he did not give it to the
russians
he didn't give it to the iraqis eating give it to any bar enemies
he gave it to journalist who then cold through it and put it on the internet
okay so a certain lone tree lonetree confess in 1987 to sell US
embassy blueprints and the names and identities undercover intelligence
agents
to the soviet union while we were in the middle the Cold War
looteries initial 30-year sentence was eventually reduced
and he was finally released in 1996 after serving
nine years you give the information the american public thirty-five years
you give it to the soviet union and you have the most classified information
blueprints of the US embassies
they could bug if they could attack a if there's a war
they would know exactly what to do in in destroy our embassies
nine years nine years what a joke
alright Barnett a former CIA agent reveal the identities
up some thirty CIA officers and other classified information to the KGB
in exchange for money served ten years before being paroled in 1990
30 CIA officers names during the trial they couldn't prove that many got warm
single person from america perk not one not one agent not one source
nothing in this case it takes 30 CIA officers
and clearly and obviously endanger their lives
we don't know how you those people were murdered he does it to the KGB 10 years
many thirty-five years American just
great because we really care about spying espionage
we really don't want our enemies to get that information ok it appears that
our enemies getting information is no big deal the american public getting the
information that's a big deal
let's go to pets I remember this case is a huge deal back when
I we were you know I was around reading the news and I remember all my god
pits during the late nineteen eighties and early nineties then an FBI Special
Agent spied for Russia
alleged to have received two hundred twenty four thousand dollars in payments
between 1987 and 1992
spy did for the russians
got paid money many didn't do it for the money no one disagrees that
even if you don't like many only thing he did was wrong everybody agrees that
many get it because he thought it would be good for the american public to have
that information
people say he should have made that decision anyway it was his decision to
make
but he didn't know for the money this guy did it for $225 thousand dollars
only a twenty-seven years alright then we go to Nicholson Nicholson was
apprehended 1996 at a washington-area airport
with rolls of film bearing images have top secret documents
he was accused of providing russia's with every secret
he could steal he was the top
CIA official who I
what turned out to be committing espionage against us
top official we ever caught only 23 years
the worst of the worst only 23 years
many gives it to the public thirty-five years you say hey check with local love
that stuff was
you the Soviet Union early to rush up there's other cases by the way that got
less
severe sentences giving information the east germany Iraq when we were in the
first persian gulf war against them et cetera way so that's in the past with us
gotta go last case you're not the case so malate
late pleaded guilty earlier this year
tempted espionage and other counts after selling secrets or
FBI undercover agent whom he believed
was a Russian spot he faced the Maximus is
sentence of confinement for life before up to life without the possibility for
okay got their way to beat up on him
worry yet he got sixteen years
sixteen years this year forgiving
top secret information to the russians inactive SB Touch
Manning gives the american public give the journalists
thirty-five years now what do you think the real priorities are