 Card number 26. Who is this guy? Manutr Gurbanefar. Manutr Gurbanefar. Gurbanefar. Manutr Gurbanefar. Ali was here. Look at all the writing. Nietzsche. Nietzsche is dead. God. Look at this one. I think that says Nietzsche is dead. God. Oh, there's Farsi writing as well. What does that say? I can't read Farsi so I don't know what that says. For, I don't know. Amacontra. Oh, N plus FH. God is dead Nietzsche. That's what it is. Check that out. So, quote, God is dead Nietzsche. And then it says Nietzsche is dead. God. Humor in the Iran Contra trading cards. Manutr Gurbanefar. Let's check this out. Card number 26. Arms merchant. Manutr Gurbanefar. By November 1984, when expatriate Iranian arms dealer Manutr Gurbanefar offered XCI agent Theodore Shackley his help in freeing hostage William Buckley, C car 24 and 25. He had already failed three CIA lie detector tests. Four months earlier, the CIA had issued a quote, burn notice and quote of Gorba. Warning that he should be regarded as an intelligence fabricator and a new one, a new, new sense. Nevertheless, Michael Leiden, terrorism consultant to the NSC and Israeli agent David Kimchi, C car 25, vouch for Gurbanefar to national security advisor Robert McFarland, C car 28. Leiden called Gurbanefar one of the most honest, educated, honorable men I have ever known. Thus, Gurbanefar became the middleman for the first five arms for hostages shipments of TOW and Tomahawk missiles to Iran. Later, McFarland was to refer to Gurbanefar as a borderline moron. After the first three missile shipments, brokered by Gurbanefar and Leiden produced only one hostage. CIA director William Casey ordered another lie detector test. Gurbanefar failed again on every question, but his name and nationality. Afterwards, he appeared at Leiden's house claiming he had been physically injured during the test. Richard Secord became Leiden's replacement, but Gurbanefar was allowed to broker two more arms deals. Oliver North testified that Gurbanefar was suspected of being an Israeli agent. North also said that Gurbanefar had given him the idea to divert profits from Iranian arms deals to the contrast in a men's room. Ladies and gentlemen, the people who run our countries and spend hundreds of billions of dollars of our taxpayer money making deals in men's washrooms.