 Kobe and Company. Who's this? Who's this? Kobe and Company. That's gotta be Vietnam. The Helicopters. Is it? Is it? Let's check this out. The Vietnam drug war, indeed. The Helicopters. The sunglasses and the helicopters gave it away. The sunglasses and the helicopters. This is like the opening scene at Poclips now. Who's this guy? Who's this guy? The Vietnam drug war. According to former CIA director William Kobe, quote, the CIA has a solid rule against being involved in drug trafficking. That's not to say that some of the people whom the CIA has used over the years may well themselves have been involved in drug trafficking, but not the CIA end quote. Kobe should know from 1959 to 1972 he oversaw most major US intelligence operations of Vietnam theater, undertaken in support of a series of drug-corrupted South Vietnamese leaders like Nhanh Dinh Dienh, 1955 to 1963, Nhanh Nguyen Kao K, 1965 to 1967, and Nhan Van Thu, 1968 to 1975. Dienh's brother, Nhanh Dinh Huan, no head of South Vietnam's secret police, guaranteed safe contact for the Corsican run Air Laos commercial to ship opium from Laos to Vietnam. Nguyen used his profits to expand the scope of the secret police power. After the MCIA-sponsored 1963 assassination, Ky became commander of the Vietnamese Air Force, which in two years displayed the Corsican airline as the prime mover of Laotian opium. Ky also taxed opium shipments through his control of both the Vietnamese Custom Service and the Saigon Port of Authority. Tho's intelligence chief, General Deng Van Quang was by 1971, quote, the biggest pusher in South Vietnam, end quote, according to the NBC Saigon correspondent, Phil Bradley. Kobe became CIA director in 1973. In 1976, he formally retired, but soon became a lawyer for the Australian-based CIA-connected Nong Hand Bank. There he joined forces again with several men previously under his command in Vietnam. Theodor Shansky, Thomas Kleins, Richard Sokort, and the bank's co-founder, Michael Hanh. Kobe and company, look at this guy. The guy who was running, working with the CIA, and running the drugs, was coming out and saying that the CIA doesn't do, doesn't, is not involved in drugs, drug trafficking.