TRANSCRIPT
Nino: Alright, so, historic summit, all 34 Western Hemisphere militaries convening, February 11th, General Dan Caine just called the first-ever full assembly of military leaders from every nation in the Western Hemisphere. This doesn’t happen by accident.
Juan: Pause for a second, let’s mince and dice and everything else.
Number one, I have somebody that’s very, very, very, very, very close to Caine – General Caine – and we had a conversation, we had lunch a month or two ago, and he was unfamiliar with them, got assigned this particular job within his staff, and he said, “You know, having had a chance to work with him, be around him and seen all the things that are going on,” he’s at all the key stuff all the time, had just total respect for General Caine, and said, “You know, this is just an amazing person.”
And I’ve heard from other people that have been in, you know, parallel command positions, and they were like, you know, “So-so,” and like that, but they were from this crowd that is really on the outs, that is not happy that Trump is in power.
And it was nice, it was refreshing to me to hear such a positive report from somebody that works with him every day; is at all the key stuff, and had just nothing but total respect for the way that he operates at a personal level, let alone what he actually does.
You know, it says a lot, you know, when people actually have to work with somebody, day in, day out, and give you a favorable report. And this person’s a great judge of character, all the right stuff, and was just extremely, you know, feels the country’s well-served by having someone like him in that kind of a position – and the President, too, by the way. Just…
Nino: OK. No, that’s great. That’s good to know – So, so let’s talk about this. Obviously, we said –
Juan: Let me dive into this other, you asked me a question about this meeting. So, what it is, is you have all the military leaders. Remember, we had this thing with all of our US commanders that, you know, general staff…
Nino: The summons that Pete Hegseth did, right, where he got up, Trump and Pete Hegseth summoned, what, 800-plus generals here in America. But now, this is from 34 Western Hemisphere militaries. Like, this is big to me. This looks really…
Juan: Yes. So, all of the senior military personnel from all the countries across the Americas have been summoned to do this meeting. It’s a strategy meeting. And what it really is, is to read everybody in: “Here’s where we’re going, this is what it’s all about.” And here’s –
Nino: Hold on a second. Hold that thought. When you say, “read everybody in”, now, prior to the generals being summoned by Pete Hegseth and now, recently, these 34 Western Hemisphere militaries, how many people were read-in, from the beginning of Trump’s operation? I know you said it was very few, correct?
Juan: Well, there’s the 200, that’s a sealed number. There’s nobody else being brought into that group. There’s been a little teeny bit of attrition. None of those are replaced within that group.
Nino: Because, I’ve noticed a lot of animosity towards – even towards you, Juan, I’m just going to say it, right now – from other people, I can sense it. Is it because they’re not read-in? Is that what it is, here? I mean, I’m trying to figure this out, and I think there’s only a –
Juan: Well, there’s a couple of people – I don’t want to say any names – that felt that they should have been included and if they weren’t included, then, “It can’t be real,” or it’s not…
Nino: And they already had a high stature, they were prominent names out there.
Juan: But they, for whatever reason – there’s a lot at stake here. You’re not just trying to save America. You’ve got the whole world on the line. And those that are in are in. And for security’s sake, it’s what it is.
And so, I have somebody right now that thought that they should have been read-in and is getting ready to leave this world and didn’t believe that they could not have been included to pull it off.
But there were issues. And so, I think it was ultimately going to proven-out to have been very wise that you err on the side of caution.
And now, this plan that has been formulating for decades, not years, decades, is coming to pass. And this is part of that, now to bring people up to speed in the open: “Here’s the path forward. Here’s what we’re going to do,” and let everybody be on board.
You know, one of the things that’s not part of the public side of this is there’s a handful of persons that cross over into intelligence operations that are also included in this, from several other countries. And so, it’s even more broad than what has been announced.
And that’s to – let me just give you one example: In order to rein-in what’s going on with the cartels, the money laundering, these terrorist organizations across the Americas, you have to cut off the money supply, the money flow.
Well, the money isn’t just oil. And it’s not these little boats that we’ve been stopping that are traveling on the surface of the water. Some of the stuff that’s got to still be done goes to the drugs that are going in submarines. And the submarines are still going.
We’ve had very measured success in getting the drug submarines, so far. Most of those are built in Colombia and in Ecuador. And they cost a couple million apiece.
They take, you know, upwards of a year to build. And, you know, one submarine can carry, you know, $100 million or more in drugs at a time. Often, much more.
Those systems include the money-laundering that goes along with it. And we haven’t gotten to the places that they’re going to. The drug-running is still going where the French connection was at, in Marseilles, France and Barcelona, Spain.
Nino: So, let me ask you this. So these militaries convening on February 11th, this is about the cartels? This is about us fighting the cartels? It’s going to take other countries’ militaries to fight against them? I guess, because their tentacles are all over, right? They’re everywhere. So is it really war against the cartels? Is this what this is?
Juan: Well, what it is is that in order to get honest government in these places, you have to cut off the cash flow, the money supply. And we’ve not attacked the drug problem effectively, going back, before the Reagan administration.
There was, you know, I’ve talked about before. It’s too long to talk about here, today.
But we created the drug kingpins to centralize the drug trade to Colombia. And it was actually a pretty intelligent operation. And then, to shut it down, there was a failure to finish the job during the Bush and Clinton administrations, Bush I and Bush II, because the money-laundering was going into Black Bag operations.
And so, that’s what Whitewater was about and the Clintons, then, when you get to the bigger picture, Arkansas and all the other states.
We have never gotten the drugs under control, coming out of Central and South America and going to the rest of the world, but primarily, Europe. So we have to if you’re going after these people, you have to cut off the money supply.
Nino: But if they’ve infiltrated all the politicians, all the militaries, and we’re going to go speak to them like, “Alright, guys, get your shit together. Time to join the fight against you,” the cartels. They’re not going to cooperate!
So, they have to have a real come-to-Jesus moment, right now. And this is going to cause a lot of disarray within the militaries of other countries.
I mean, it’s hard enough to bring in the reins of our own country. How do we expect to do it with other countries? I mean, they’re not going to listen to us. They’re going to be like, “OK, nice. See you later. We’re going to conduct business as usual.” I mean, how are we going to get through to them?
Juan: Well, I think that we can’t be fatalistic about it. There’s no question that it’s one Hell of a fight to do this. It’s not been done before. But you have to understand we have good guys here in our country in the military. It might not be everybody, but we have a lot of great folks.
And in these other countries, they’ve got some great folks, too who – look, it’s their kids, their grandma, their house, that’s threatened, as much as everybody else.
And most of them get into the service, not with nefarious intent, but with goodwill, just like most of the guys who become a cop. They want to be a Good Guy and they don’t start out to be a Bad Guy. And for a percentage of them, they get tweaked along the way.
But, you know, we go in there knowing that there are good guys. I, you know, I have a friend, we just spoke this morning, who helped in one of these country’s military spent almost a year embedded with them and had nothing but good things to say about these guys, as they tried to do the good fight.
The problem was, is that their governments and the governments around them were in bed with the cartels and with China and trying to find a way out. We’re going to come in and help them to do what they actually do want to do, which is get their countries under control and stop the graft and the theft and the corruption.
You know, they have daughters. They see what’s going on on the streets and they want to stop it. They see the Chinese brothels set up all over their towns and they want to stop it. So we’re going to give them a hand.
And bringing everybody under one roof and letting them all know there’s no – you know, part of the problem is when you go read people in individually, you know, small groups, everybody has to second guess what was said. And if they were included or not, you bring them all in under one roof, there’s no question: You all got the word, same time, this is what’s going on.
And nobody has to look over their shoulder and wonder if the next guy heard the same thing as he did. And we’re going to help them to start working together to stop this across the Americas. I think it’s a genius idea to do it right there, in plain sight. Nobody has to question anything.
Nino: So, OK, so, you know, this brings to mind for me, Mexico, Colombia. I mean, obviously, everyone knows the technology that we possess and the warfare that we can deliver on anybody.
I mean, obviously, we’re superior to everybody with our warfare. So they better listen-up. Thing is this, cartels are unconventional warfare and their tentacles are spread throughout the United States.
And I know that’s a lot of the reason the ICE raids are happening right now, is to take the violent criminals, masterminds down from organizing terrorist events and things of that nature, mass shootings. But how do we fight against conventional warfare, unconventional warfare?
Like it’s almost like it’ll be could it be like Vietnam? But in in America, with the way these guys are planning to disrupt or cause chaos with car bombs, mass-shootings, you know, how bad is this going to get? What are we anticipating, here?
Juan: Well, you know, in the prior drug wars, let’s say from the ’80s, we were dealing ultimately with half measures. And we had to keep choking back because the politics and like that.
But Reagan did shut the border down with Mexico. And until we got the people that were behind Kiki’s death. And by the way, his partner – one of my guys – his partner worked together extensively. He was a fantastic guy.
And at the end of the day, these guys still want to win this war. They’ve got their whole life into it. They’ve thought about this stuff. They want it done, just as some of these other people from other countries want to do. Trump is not going to do half measures.
If you get anything from this last year, it’s about not doing the half measures that happened before and doing something far more extensive, far more – that has a prayer of winning this – including the banking. You got to remember, at the end of the day, why are they doing this? We want to make a bunch of money.
We’re going to get all the money. We’re going to take it all, take it off the table, take it out of these other people’s hands. They’re not going to get their money. Everywhere we find it, we’re going to take it all. That’s what Trump’s going to do. Take the profit, the benefit out of it.
Nino: Hurt their wallet.
Juan: And so, part of that that is not fully understood, I’ve told your audience, I’m going to say it again, and you got to read between the lines. We’re going to take and create a buffer, not just the US border, but at a couple of other locations. And that buffer is going to be an economic zone, somewhere between 15 and 25 miles into Mexico and we’re going to control everything.
Nino: OK, let me ask you this. This buffer zone, does that start from the border? Like, let’s say I live in El Paso-Juarez, right? So does that mean like, is it going to be American territory? Like, what does that look like? The buffer zone? Is that our military patrolling their streets?
Because obviously, we can’t trust their military. They’re all federales and cartel members.
So what does that look like? Let’s say I want to go to Juarez and I cross over the bridge. Am I in a neutral zone or am I in an American – ? What does this look like? How many miles down south does this go? And is it only in the northern part of Mexico?
Juan: Well, again, as I said, throughout the region, we’re going to do something along these lines, that we’re going to have economic zones. We’re not taking any territory from Mexico. Mexico’s border is still Mexico’s border. But we are going to have an area that we jointly enforce.
Nino: So our military will be there?
Juan: Yeah.
Nino: Enforcing what?
Juan: We’re not going to let the gangs, the cartels, the lawlessness happen in that area. Um, look at where you’re at with the border there in El Paso. Now, push that area that we help enforce back into Mexico, you know, 15 to 25 miles.
Nino: Damn, damn.
Juan: They got to go a long ways before they even get to our border.
Nino: You know, that’s going to disrupt the tunneling systems, everything.
Juan: That’s right. And see, it’s a layered thing. So, for example, you go to these ultra secure remote bases, and you look at how they’re layered in their security. The outer security level is, in some locations, geese. Geese are great watchdogs.
Nino: That makes a lot of sense.
Juan: Because the geese will honk and alert if you have anybody in the area, and you have this long, wide open area. And, you know, to get across that open field, to even get to the first major fence, is a son of a gun. So that outer wire is, you know, looks to be wide open, but you got to cross a lot of ground to get to where you can even get to the first real, secure fence.
You don’t have to have a super high security fence all the way across, you know, miles and miles and miles. It might be down to, you know, a few thousand yards. And so, you know, what we’re doing is we’re creating a buffer.
It also works for the people that want to come and go from Mexico to here, back and forth, where there’s a relative safe zone. The greatest crimes happening in this whole immigrant problem are the crimes against the immigrants.
You know, people act like we’re somehow doing crimes against them. No, they’re being vandalized, criminalized, raped, taken advantage of, all the way to get to the US. I mean, the rape trees with all the garments thrown all over the trees from the women that come to the country. That’s a horror and it’s happening on our watch.
Nino: Yeah, there was at one point here in Juarez, there was thousands of women missing from the maquiladoras around the year, you know, around 99, 1999, 2000 to 2000. I’m sure it’s still happening, but they were finding mass graves of women that were brutally raped, murdered, you know, torn apart, fed to the pigs, some of them bones scattered everywhere, acid buckets, I mean, in barrels. I mean, they were just, and there was mass burial grounds all over Juarez where they were killing specifically women, man, and it was just women and in the thousands.
Juan: Yeah, it’s, for the immigrants that are baited to come here, it’s a horror. They run the gauntlet before they ever get here. And then, the money, they have to pay back to the gangs. And so stopping this is huge.
And, you know, to portray this, by the way, there’s a number of people, I know many of them who are locked into this whole Zionist, Jewish, everything related to ICE and enforcing the immigration stuff. You know, please. Come on, man, you’re convoluting things. You don’t convolute these issues.
It serves the purposes of those that are trying to keep this going; attacking America with immigrants. It’s working at cross purposes. I mean, I could spend a bunch of time on it, but this short version is that’s a racket.
Nino: People really don’t know how bad, you know, Mexico is and how, you know, I’ve lived here all my life in El Paso. I don’t go to Juarez anymore. The last time I went there, I had a gun pulled to my head and they were going to, you know, because I didn’t tip a waiter, but I did tip the waiter.
The waiter came out complaining to me and I said, he said, “No paga, no paga.” And I told him, you know, someone obviously stole the cash I put down on the table. And then anyway, some thugs came running up to me, pointed guns to my head and said, “Pam!” and all I had was like $5 left in my pocket.
It was, I thought I was going to die. But that was the last time I went to Juarez. That was it, right there. That was all, never went back. But people don’t realize how they do business there and how they conduct themselves there and how it’s really done there.
It’s dog-eat-dog over there. And that’s it, man. You’re either with the cartels or you’re not. And they run the show. They extort companies. They extort, you know, all the businesses there on the strip in Juarez. I mean, it’s ruthless, man.
Like people don’t want that here. And that’s what they’re trying to do by introducing these people here to America. That’s what would happen. Our country would be that in a matter of months, right, Juan?
Juan: Well, in a lot of places, it is that, right now.
Nino: Yeah. I mean, that’s who these people are protecting, man. That’s who these, and I’ll tell another quick story. Juan, I went to a pharmacy back in the day when I was shooting up steroids. And I went into a pharmacy and I went into the back room to get myself a shot in the ass.
And when I was in there, I was, it was a dark bathroom. And I remember, man, this bathroom is usually lit up, you know, it usually has lights in here. And there was this hanging lamp over the toilet when I was pulling the syringes out of the plastic and I couldn’t see.
So I pulled the lamp, the light on the above my head. I pulled it. And as it’s swinging, there was a shower to the right of me.
And as I looked into the shower, I was like, man, I saw all these neatly folded clothes. Against the shower wall, right there. So I said, what the hell? So I shined the light into the shower and the shower had a hose on it. And as I looked into the dark shower, there was heads, Juanito, all with the expression that they had when they were cut off.
And I, I remember I panicked, I freaked out. And I, I said, man, if I don’t get the Hell out of here, I’m going to be next! I put that stuff. I gave myself the shot. I threw it down the [trash], and I could –
You know, she kept telling me, “Otro baño, otro baño”, “Go to the other bathroom,” but I was so familiar with that bathroom that I went to the one I always go into. And now, I know why she was telling me to go into the other bathroom.
And as I walked out of the bathroom and started walking down the hall, all these mafioso cartel-looking older men, you know, forties, fifties, sixties were playing cards that looked at me. And they knew that I saw what I saw. And man, I never ran so fast for the border, man!
The border was just about a quarter mile over. And I swung a left turn and booked it over the border as fast as I could, man. And so, I’ve seen a lot of sh¡t in Mexico, man, you know, like the stuff that people should never see. You know what I mean? I know what they do. It’s ruthless, man. It’s absolutely ruthless over there. And people are just numb to it over there.
Juan: Well, part of my point, even with the, the ICE stuff, you know, the people that were getting out of here, um, you look at the rap sheets of a bunch of the people that they’re going after that they’ve already arrested. And, you know, the horrors that these people are responsible for having, you know, done, it’s almost unfathomable, the amount of murder and rape like that. And so it’s a righteous thing to go get them off the American streets and it’s, it’s dirty business.
Nino: But they’re going to have to fight back, Juan. I mean, they have no choice.
Juan: Well, again, by creating the buffer, we’re moving the war, uh, off the US streets and creating a buffer zone here to America. They all want to get here. So, the place to defend is right here. This is the fort and we’ve had prior administrations and people who weren’t interested in defending America. They had their Globalist attachments and as Trump said at Davos, “Globalism is dead.”
And part of Globalism is to destroy America, so that we’re no longer in their way to create their New World Order. Well, if you’re going to stop the New World Order, you’ve also got to stop them from destroying America. We’re the ones that have to get in the way.
Nino: So, Trump goes there and fires the shots out to the Davos Crowd or let’s them know, but Juanito, you know, as well as I do, they’re not going to, they’re still, they’re not going to say, “OK. Great, Trump. That’s, that’s nice.” But what about a post-Trump era? I mean, the Globalists will stop at nothing!
Juan: Let’s not just go right past this for a second. Mexico and the leadership in Mexico, they talk a good game. “They don’t want this. They hate the cartels. They don’t know what to do!”
Uh, you got great people in Mexico, policing people that have been trying to do the right thing. They’ve got their stories, their family members, their towns. They know what was destroyed there, but they haven’t had effectual assistance, there in the government. OK. Well, they need a big brother to come help them out. And that’s exactly what we’re going to do. We don’t want to enslave them. We’re not trying to take over the world.
What we’re going to do is we’re going to get a handle on these monsters and help them to enforce their own territory. So we’re going to help Mexico out. Going to help them make the right decisions and push these cartels back and, and where they’ve dug deep roots, up at the border we’ll unroot them and plow that ground. And I guarantee you, the people that live in those areas are going to be very thankful that we’re at this, the good people.
Nino: I understand. This just seems like a, such a lengthy operation. And I just –
Juan: Well, what are you going to do? You got to start somewhere, right?
Nino: Well, Trump’s 79.
Juan: We’re going to be doing this for the next 50 years.
Nino: I don’t trust. I don’t trust JD Vance. I’m just going to say it. I mean, maybe I’ll get to like him later, but right now, I’m like, eh, you know, he’s in with Peter Thiel.
Juan: OK. Again, hold on, hold on, hold on. Let’s back up for a second. First off, we have to fight the war right now. You don’t have to worry about Vance for the time being. And as I’ve said, we haven’t seen, in my opinion, who’s going to be the ones on deck to replace him and let’s get through this moment and get a little closer to that before, you know, we get distracted.
You know, you got to catch the ball, run it in and get the points this time before you can even worry about it.
Nino: No doubt. No doubt. I’m not saying that. I just, I just know that these people are so well-coordinated and sophisticated in how they want it.
Juan: Well, so you’re saying, as soon as you say that you’re implying that we aren’t! This is a fight.
Nino: I just don’t believe –
Juan: We’re a lot bigger than they are. Believe me, we’re a lot bigger. And by the way, they want us to fight conventionally with the stuff they have. We have stuff they’ve never even dreamed of. It was the will to use those things and the will to use it didn’t exist in prior administrations, because they were in on it and the people around them were in on it.
So and by the way, what’s Trump supposed to do? You got the people that you got. He’s retraining, re-educating, getting a lot of people to rethink how they think and operate even around him.
He’s setting a tone. So somebody has got to decide, “Nope, this is the way we’re doing it. And force of will and the people around start snapping-to and, and, and understanding. That’s why you have to call all of this, the general staff across the Americas together, the Western Hemisphere and have a meeting and read them all in at the same time. “Here’s the plan.”
And you can have your little conclaves off to the side, etc. But here’s the plan. And, and more and more people are going to understand that and jump on board. You know, you got to start somewhere.
Nino: I get it. No, I get it. I just, okay. I’m just thinking ahead here. So I was seeing at the, the world economic forum, the Davos, they were interviewing a guy who is introducing this tablet that dissolves in your stomach and shows a signal to show you’ve taken it. Imagine the applications that you have to use for that and the compliance.
So the Pfizer, he was the Pfizer CEO, Albert Bourla, I think his name is about tracking pills. I mean, this is what they have in store for humanity. These people are still stopping at nothing. I mean, they’re still looking, they’re, they’re looking beyond Trump is what I’m saying. I’m just saying, excuse me for asking about a post-Trump era or if Trump is going to even serve another term, but we, we got to kind of look at that because these people are stopping at nothing, man. They’re going to keep going.
Juan: OK. So one of the things that you have to kind of bear in mind, Nino, Trump went to Davos and everybody there, almost to a person – think of it – everybody there wanted to kill Trump. I mean, where would you find a place that was more anti-Trump than Davos? Seriously?
The resolve to go there. And then, and they had a, they had a mechanical issue – or medical – on the plane on the way to Davos and switched aircraft, OK? If it was medical, why would you switch aircraft? And Trump went anyway, he was not going to be deterred.
Nino: I know that’s, that’s balls, man.
Juan: So, but why is that? Because we’re not backing down. Uh, Trump is not easing up. He’s going to get the job done. And, uh, at the end of the day, he has one thing that a lot of these guys don’t have. He’s got God himself in his corner is the way that Trump would say it.
And you got a lot of people that want to draw aspersions that “Trump is the Devil, himself!” and he’s “Doing the work of Satan” and that he’s “In somebody’s pocket,” that he’s “Taking the Globalism further,” you know, a house divided against itself won’t stand. Well, if the Devil is actually behind Trump he’s letting Trump destroy his house. It doesn’t make any sense.
Trump is destroying these evil networks and it’s layered, you know, you keep having to move. You have to move further and further to get to the core where the evil is white hot, OK? Well, we’re having to move down through these layers to get to the worst of it.
Just ’cause you got Maduro doesn’t mean that you got the Cubans that were running Maduro. Got a few security personnel that were there doing the bidding of the Cubans; doesn’t mean that you got to the rest of their network; the money-laundering, everything else.
The people of Cuba are starving to death and yet, leadership people, living other places in the world and coming and going, they’re just fine. They’re fat.
We’re coming for Cuba. We’re going to help Cuba.
And, and look at, look at all the angst and fire. Spitting venom, these serpents over Greenland and Trump comes back from their little Davos conclave. And what’s he got? “Yeah, we can work it out. No problem.”
Nino: Well, Juan, I got a hard stop. I gotta jump on another podcast, but I appreciate you coming on. This has been epic, as always.





