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June 11, 2012 - The Unexplained - Howard Hughes
49:59
Edition 82 - James Bond Is Real

This new Edition features the highly controversial research of ex-military man and authorMike Sparks - Mike believes there was much more to Bond-creator and British War Hero Ian Fleming thanmost people know. The views expressed in this show are those of the guest - and not those of TheUnexplained, Creative Hotspot or Howard Hughes.

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Across the UK, across continental North America and around the world on the internet, by webcast and by podcast, my name is Howard Hughes and this is The Unexplained.
Thank you for coming back to the show.
Thank you for the informative and supportive emails that I've had recently.
Lots of good suggestions, both for the show and about my tinnitus problem, which I acquired after an infection virus that I got a couple of months ago.
Left me with some hearing difficulties that I'm still working through.
Got a couple of appointments coming up in hospital during July.
So I'm full of hope that it's all going to be okay.
But very important for me to get back behind a microphone because that's what I do and that's what I enjoy.
Three shows coming up.
This one is one that I recorded a couple of months ago and for one reason or another just haven't been able to get out to you before now.
Highly controversial show.
More on this in a second.
A show coming up about UFOs and ufology.
Completely new take on those subjects for the 21st century.
Think you'd be interested in that.
And a show about working miracles.
And I think at the moment, a lot of us need those miracles, don't we?
In the news here, since we last spoke, we had the Queen's Jubilee celebrations in London, a fantastic concert here.
Paul McCartney doing superb work, really.
Bearing in mind, the guy is 70 years of age thereabouts.
Cliff Richard here, British songmaster, doing well as well at his age.
He's 70 odd as well.
Plus some of the new acts here and also stars from the 1980s, including Grace Jones, who did a great version of Slave to the Rhythm, which is one of my favorite songs from the 1980s.
But she did it while hula hooping continuously through the song.
How she did this in a leather costume in a certain amount of heat outside Buckingham Palace in London for the duration of Slave to the Rhythm, I don't know, but wow.
She can do that at 60 odds.
She's doing pretty damn well.
So that's one thing that's happened here on the news front.
Spain said it wasn't going to have a bailout, now has had a bailout of the banks in Spain, which all goes to prove what a lot of people are telling me.
And I do fervently believe it, we are not being told the truth about the state of European finances, or indeed finances anywhere in the world.
And you'll hear more about that, I can guarantee.
And I don't think I'm that psychic.
What else has been happening?
Weather.
Very strange weather.
I'm speaking to you now after two continuous days of heavy rain in June in London.
Something that tends not to happen these days, but they've had flooding in various parts of the UK.
There's also been storms in places like Durban, South Africa and Perth, Western Australia.
They've had storms.
And as I speak to you, New York City is having summer rain too.
Quite heavy rain as well.
I don't think it's quite as heavy as we've been having here in London, but what happened to our summer?
Well, we've still got a couple of months.
Let's hope something does happen that's good.
Okay, a highly controversial show this time.
And I'll tell you why.
It's a show that I recorded a couple of months ago with a man called Mike Sparks.
Now, his book, James Bond is for Real, is available both sides of the Atlantic.
I've checked it out.
It is available in bookstores here in the UK.
It is to do with James Bond.
I'm sure we've all seen Bond movies, haven't we?
The great hero and the great espionage genius, I suppose you could call him.
And the author, the man who created James Bond, Ian Fleming.
Now, Mike Sparks believes that Ian Fleming, who some of you may know worked in intelligence during the war, that Ian Fleming is in fact the real James Bond.
And we'll explain why that is.
Now, this is highly controversial stuff.
And if you don't like to have your sensibilities challenged, if you don't like something that is highly controversial, then tune out right now and perhaps listen to something else and come back to the next show because you won't like this.
If you want to take a walk on the wild side, then I recommend what Mike Sparks has to say.
Before we go to it, just to say that the views of Mike Sparks in his book, James Bond is for Real, are not the views of Creative Hotspot or The Unexplained or me necessarily.
They are the views of Mike Sparks.
Having got that disclaimer out the way, I think you'll be interested by what the man has to say.
So let's get to him right now.
And as I say, thank you very much for your emails.
If you want to give me feedback about the show or leave me a donation, thank you if you have donated, by the way, go right now to the website, www.theunexplained.tv.
Okay, let's now hear the interview that I did with Mike Sparks a couple of months ago.
He's in the United States, and his book, like I say, is called James Bond is for Real.
Mike Sparks, thank you for coming on The Unexplained.
Yeah, glad to be here.
Now, I'm taking a bit of a fly here because you and I have been in dialogue for months about this.
And for one reason or another, this conversation hasn't come about before now.
It's something that I'm not that convinced about, so you're going to have to do a bit of convincing here.
But by the sounds of your emails to me, that's not going to be something that's going to be difficult for you at all.
The title of your book, James Bond is Real.
Now, as somebody who grew up watching James Bond movies with Sean Connery and every other James Bond between when I was a small boy and right now, you know, I kind of think of James Bond as a fictional character.
Why is that not right?
What happened is Ian Fleming in World War II was the second highest in British naval intelligence.
And while he was there, he collected information about the enemy, the Germans.
So what you see in his writing, and you go to those books to see that, is that under the Official Secrets Act, he couldn't speak freely.
But what he's trying to say in his books, in code, once you break the code, is he's telling you that the Germans escaped.
The Nazis escaped in World War II in good order.
That means they left with their key personnel, lots of money, and key technology, tools to make other tools.
And the idea is that they left in good order and brought their high technology to places like Greenland, Norway, Antarctica, and South America.
And when they did that, they were able to recreate actual flying saucers.
Because if you look in the early era of the flying saucers from 1945 to 1962, the flying saucers that were spotted were very crude.
They give off smoke.
They give off slag.
They were flying over Washington, D.C. They were shooting down other airplanes.
And if you look at all the evidence, you'll see that they're actually human, not from another planet.
So when you see a movie like Iron Sky being very popular right now in the alternative movie world, the reason is because it struck a nerve.
And the nerve is that people know out there, but we weren't really told the truth of how World War II ended.
World War II did not end like we made it sound like.
They actually a lot of people have suggested this over the years, and there's been all sorts of talk about, for example, I'm sure you've heard about the Nazi bell that they were working on and the changes in physics that's supposed to have brought about and the idea that after the war, the scientists who created these things got away and they used that technology for things like time travel, interdimensional travel, interplanetary travel, and all the rest of it.
But I'm fascinated that you found clues to that kind of thing in the works of Ian Fleming.
Well, what it is, is that I was reading about this stuff in a book by Nick Cook.
He's a famous British aerospace journalist for Janes, very respectable now.
He wrote a book called The Hunt for Zero Points.
So I'm reading the book and I'm going, you know, okay, we've got these guys.
They're fleeing from Germany.
The German Navy's the primary agent for moving them out.
And then all of a sudden he says, you know, one group of people who's going to know a lot about this is Ian Fleming's 30 Assault Unit.
And they go, what?
30 Assault Unit?
Ian Fleming?
I thought he was just a bureaucrat, you know, intelligence guy.
I find out later by doing some more research that he actually founded this intelligence gathering commando unit, 30 assault unit, and that they captured the entire German Navy's records at the end of the war.
In fact, I went and did more research on Ian Fleming.
I find out that he actually went to Camp X in Canada, received commando training, and after that was done, he actually wrote the blueprint for the Office of Strategic Services, the OSS, and he received a pistol, I mean, a revolver for his work.
So this guy is fully qualified as a commando and a spy.
And then even more stunning, in 1996, a book was written called OPJB, The Last Great Secret of World War II by Christopher Crichton.
He lays out how Fleming actually busted Martin Borman out of Berlin in 1945.
And I'm going, oh my God.
So then I go back and say, if I could just hold up for just half a second, let's back up there.
You're saying that Ian Fleming helped Martin Borman, who was a Nazi war criminal, get out of the situation that he was in and away after the war.
Right.
In exchange for a loot.
Basically, you know, England was hurting for money and they had stolen all the money and loot from, you know, the concentration camp survivors.
So Martin Borman offered, you know, the English government a cool billion.
Of course, not realizing they probably had 100 billion at least, but in exchange for him being, you know, removed out of Berlin, which was surrounded by forces, mostly Soviet forces.
All right.
So you're saying that a deal was done with this man and the money that the British got was dirty money.
I mean, it was money with blood on it.
Yes.
And so the idea was that he outlines the plan, and it's extremely feasible.
As a military man, when you're surrounded by armies all over on the land, there's no way you're going to land an airplane, even a short takeoff and landing plane.
So you see a very clever plan to use seaplanes, fly Borman out by a seaplane, and then get him to the watery area of Lake Mogulsi first, and then transfer him to a short takeoff and landing Lysander plane and fly him out.
Sounds like the kind of way that it would have been done in those days, and the Lysander plane often used for covert operations.
Anybody who's watched a war film knows that.
But what evidence, really?
What concrete evidence is there that that happened?
It's an amazing story.
I mean, it's a real eyebrow raiser, but what evidence?
I went ahead and checked the references on Christopher Crichton from other people.
Even the guy who's trying to dismiss him, Nigel West, he actually in his book verifies because he's got a quote from William Stevenson saying, you know, everything that this guy did in the war was true.
And so what I did was I spent two years tracking down Christopher Crichton, and I found him.
He also goes by the name John Ainsworth Davis, and he's an accomplished TV movie producer and actor.
He directed, you know, Roger Moore in a couple episodes of The Saint.
I actually made personal contact with him, and I'm talking to the guy that actually busted Borman out.
He was a second in command with Ian Fleming, and the story all checks out.
In what way?
Well, the facts check out, you know, the time and days when he was there, when Borman was busted out, when Fleming was supposed to be on a worldwide tour, that was a cover story.
You have Fleming describing where the bases are going to be in South America in, you know, the man called Intrepid.
Then you cross-reference that with the, I call the low technology defeat German theory people like Ladislas Farago.
And you've got the timeline of them escaping.
And Farago says that Bormann escaped through the help of a rescue group.
Now, come on, in World War II, can you imagine some Red Cross people handing out donuts, putting together a rescue group?
We're going to go into Berlin, which is being beset by Soviet artillery and tanks and infantry.
We're just going to rescue this guy.
So even Ladislas Farago does not contradict the story.
In fact, he cryptically alludes to it.
And at the time, there was nobody better at intelligence operations.
I'm talking about in that era than the British.
They were very, very good at it.
No, I still think they're still very good.
You know, part of the goodness is don't go around bragging.
And the British are still masters.
We, in fact, are jealous of them and refuse to admit that we got help from the British.
So when I tried to find the 72-page memorandum that Fleming wrote to William Donovan, I so far haven't been able to find it.
Nobody wants to give it to me, basically, because it's embarrassing.
It's basically saying, you know, the United States could not put together an intelligence service unless they got detailed help from the British.
Now, I do have a three-page document from the National Archives and the Imperial War Museum.
It's got that.
But this 72-pager is missing.
To add to the mystery, the longest excerpt that I have of this 72-page document comes from Nigel West's book, The Historical Dictionary of Ian Fleming's World of Intelligence.
So then when I contacted Nigel and I said, well, where did you get this excerpt?
He says, I don't have the 72-pager.
And I go, well, where did it come from?
So we're out of impasse with him.
It's a very mysterious thing, this 72-page documenter.
You're saying that that happened for starters and that Ian Fleming laid clues in his literature to this.
Right.
And I detail it in the book.
I show you, I say, look here at Thunderball, when he talks about the ship that Emilia Largo is using, it's translate to flying saucer.
Disco Volante means flying saucer.
So Ian Fleming is keeping these clues, you know, and, you know, dropping them throughout his books because he's under the Official Secrets Act.
He can't, you know, make any overt things.
All right, let's clear the timeline.
I want to make sure we've got this absolutely clarified.
So Martin Borman gets out of Germany, is helped by the British to do that, by this secret unit that Ian Fleming set up, essentially, goes away.
What does he do then, as far as you're aware?
He was very depressed by it.
He took to the bottle.
So a lot of the people that are trying to disparage Fleming are saying he was just a drunk and a womanizer and all that.
But that just doesn't make sense.
When you read his life story, he's number two man in British Naval Intelligence.
He's very upbeat.
He's a commando.
He's a spy.
He's no longer trying to please mom.
I mean, none of that psychological babble is in effect.
He's a self-actualizing military man.
So for him to go to drink, it has to be something bad happening, you know, something that caused him to do that.
Or a secret that he knows.
Something that he knows.
A secret that he can't tell anybody.
But the thing that's very, very interesting is that we find that he was working for MI6 before the war.
When you work for Reuters, that's MI6.
MI6 owns Reuters, new surgeons.
And he was working there covering the spy trials in Moscow, tried to get an audience with Stalin.
So he's working before the war with MI6.
During the war, he's working for Naval Intelligence Division.
After the war, he's working in the Naval Reserve until 1951.
I've got a quote for you I want to read to you from Nigel West's book.
It says, for much of the period, Fleming also worked for SIS while he's working at Kemsley's newspaper, Sunday Times.
As he himself acknowledged, when in the summer of 51 he finally gave up his commission in Royal Navy Reserve on the grounds he was unable to spare the two weeks for the mandatory annual training, Fleming made an unsuccessful plea for special exemption from the irksome requirement, reminding Vladimir Wolfson,
the Russian-born Naval Intelligence Division officer who had been based in Turkey during the war, that as foreign manager of the Sunday Times and Kemsley newspapers, I am engaged throughout the year in running a worldwide intelligence organization, and there could be no better training for the duties I would have to carry out for the DNI in the event of war.
I also carry out a number of tasks on behalf of a department of the Foreign Office, and this department would, I believe, be happy to give details of these activities to the DNI.
Wow.
So basically, Ian Fleming was James Bond.
He isn't looking constantly for other men for inspiration.
He's telling you he is James Bond.
He's going all over the world.
So James Bond, that we see Sean Connery and all the other James Bond, there's been, you know, Piers Brosnan, Roger Moore, all the rest of them, they were just Hollywoodized versions of the writer, of the guy himself.
Yes, yes, because spy work, you actually work undercover, you know, as somebody, a civilian occupation.
So when he's, you know, running these foreign, you know, journalists all over the world and himself taking his trips, he's he's spying along with them.
So he also learned how to do this, you know, in Switzerland at Kutzbohl under the tutelage of Ermin Forbes Dennis and his wife, Phyllis Batom.
He basically learned foreign languages under their tutelage, meaning as a young man, he trained to be a spy all along.
So he is James Bond.
Now, once you understand that Ian Fleming is James Bond, James Bond is real, then you see what happens in his books, what he's writing about.
And, you know, he also helped write some of the early movie scripts.
He's telling you underground basis, underground basis, underground bases, you know, secret organizations coming together with a lot of money, you know, cover activities.
Sure.
I get what you're saying, but Mike, a lot of people, certainly in this country in the war, a lot of people who later became prominent after the war, they were involved in intelligence.
You know, it seemed that almost half the nation was involved in intelligence during the war.
But Ian Fleming, fine, he was involved in doing these things.
How do we know that his works of fiction actually reflect what really happened?
It's one thing to say, okay, he was involved in intelligence and he did do these things as part of the various activities that you just told me about.
But how do we know that the more bizarre elements of this that are reflected in his fiction are actually real?
How do we know that?
Well, you decode it.
Basically, I would tell people to go to Moonraker.
And of course, I covered out a chapter in the book.
But if you go to Moonraker, it's clearly showing that the guy, Drax, is an analog for Wernher von Braun because he's got a Nazi, well, he's not discovered as a Nazi yet, but he's an industrialist.
He's making a weapon for England to defend himself against the Soviets.
It's a ballistic missile.
And lo and behold, he's got a team of 50 German scientists working for him.
And at the end of the story, you know, I hate to be a spoiler here, but if you read the book, he's actually a lieutenant of Otto Skorzeni's, you know, Drax.
And he chose the identity of another British officer during a bombing that he was conducting, took his identity, and basically the missile is going to be aimed at London in revenge.
So if you look at all of what people like Joseph Farrell and Henry Stevens have proven that there was a northern escape route through Denmark and Norway and the Nazis escaped in good order, you compare the Operation Paperclip scientist going to the United States,
you can see that Ian Fleming, when he's writing Moonraker, he's telling us about what's going on right now in Operation Paperclip, that these guys are talking to the, we'll call them the fourth Reich people that are in hiding.
So what you have to do is go to works of Farrell and Henry Stevens and compare Operation Paperclip's activities with Moonraker.
And you can see exactly what's happening.
I mean, there's so many people who have documented, it's kind of become a cliche.
Operation Paperclip, everyone knows about that.
You know, the German intelligence apparatus that was oriented to the east, to Russia, was hired in total by the CIA, and General Gellen was brought over his whole entire apparatus.
But you mentioned Werner von Braun there.
I mean, wasn't he a good guy?
He worked for NASA, helped America get to the moon, didn't he?
Yes, but he's partially a good guy.
He was still an SS officer during the war.
He led a lot of people to their deaths, working in the Mitzers or the tunnels, working to the death to create the V-2 missiles.
In other words, he was willing to throw regular human beings under the bus for his glory, which he wanted to see man go into space.
But he's doing it with action-reaction rockets.
The point that Farrell and Stevens are saying, look, there's hard evidence, Nick Cook, Witzynirski, these Polish researchers, there's no doubt that the Germans were working on anti-gravity craft.
There's no doubt that from 45 to 62, we see these crude anti-gravity craft flying all over the world and menacing the United States.
And where were they coming from?
Were they all coming from South America?
Yeah, generally speaking, we think they're coming from South America.
It's less hostile environment to launch and recover aircraft of any kind.
And what about these people?
We've heard over the years lots of claims that a lot of Nazis escaped to South America, had whole communities there.
I think there's even, is it in Argentina, a whole German community even today there?
How can you keep a thing like that?
I mean, you're going to tell me you know about it, many other people do, but how can you, by and large, keep a thing like that a secret?
Well, it's tolerated by the people around them.
Surrounding people provide the insulating layer.
They want the money that the German Nazis brought down there, and the Nazis have diversified into an international, basically a conglomeration of legitimate companies.
Okay, so these people are got out of Germany, and our guys know about this.
This is the bit that doesn't compute with me.
Ian Fleming and this secret team helped to get some of these people out of Germany because of a big money deal, because we're short of money over here.
These bad guys go to South America and they start using technology that they were working on for what end?
To do what?
Well, it's part of their religion.
Their religion is they're the superior race that eventually the Nordic people are going to take over the world because they're the only ones that will do the necessary things to overcome nature.
But let me make sure that I've got this right.
They're creating the things that we called flying saucers and very crude ones at the very beginning, more sophisticated ones later.
And they're flying them up there.
But I don't understand what that's for because they're not using them to take over the world, are they?
Or maybe they are, you know?
Well, the idea as a third power is they're acting as a wedge.
They're trying to get the East and West to fight each other.
And, you know, Gellen was definitely guilty of that, overestimating the Soviets' capabilities.
So the idea is that they're just keeping their own survival going, their lineage going, so that eventually they'll dominate again.
And the sad thing is it looks like they've taken over the United States.
And the United States has taken a turn towards right-wing fascist views.
So people like Jim Mars will say that we have become the fourth Reich.
In other words, we're imbued by technology and will do anything, throw anyone under the bus to get this technological advance.
Are you saying that both the East and the West, I mean the old East, the Cold War East, and our side knew that this stuff was going on?
Yes, but they were threatened by them with their superior technology.
Don't do anything because otherwise we'll fly a flying saucer next to one of your nuclear missile silos, make it malfunction, that kind of thing.
That they had the edge to say back off.
Back in 2009, there were some lights seen over Oslo, Norway, weren't there?
A spectacular light show, which wasn't the northern lights.
At the time, there were those who speculated that exactly the force you're talking about used that as a demonstration of their power, just to say, this is what we are.
This is what we can do.
Don't you guys forget that?
Do you buy that?
Well, it's a possibility.
And yeah, I do buy it.
And see, the thing is that I say is why don't we shake the tree and find out?
If you look in my book, we have places in Antarctic where there's huge holes.
Why don't we get our butt down there and go in there, send some UAVs, some robots, unmanned ground vehicles, go find out.
And as far as the bases down there in South America, well, let's go down there.
Let's go down there and find out where these openings are on the side of the mountain.
Force the issue, in other words.
Instead of speculating and getting mad at each other for, I'd mad that you speculate this.
Well, it's simple enough to find out.
So the descendants of the Nazis are still down there in South America.
Are any of the original Nazis still alive?
They're going to be very old if they are.
Yes, they'll still be very old if they are.
And I think they have passed the torch on.
Now, Henry Stevens does not.
In his last and greatest book here, Darkstar by Henry Stevens, Hidden History of German Secret Bases, Flying Disc, and U-Boats, he absurdly says during the book that he can't get any information out from South America because everyone's afraid they're going to get killed.
Yet, in 1989, the flying saucers just stopped being flown.
They just started to rust.
The underground bases are no longer being used.
He just says the older generation just gave up.
That just doesn't compute to me.
You don't create a multi-billion dollar series of corporations all over the world and not look to the day when you get too old to do this stuff.
You're going to pass it on to your second generation.
It just doesn't make sense.
And I think it could be Henry Stevens just doing that to cover his six o'clock.
He's saying, you know, there's no threat.
Don't worry about it.
I'm not buying that.
If you're saying things are true, we need to get down there one way or another and force the issue.
All right.
I'm a big one being a journalist for primary research.
In other words, hearing things for yourself.
How much of this stuff do you know because people have told you this?
And how much of it have you read?
I'd say 80% I've read, 20% I've been told.
Okay, well, that's the interesting stuff, the 20%, isn't it?
The 80% supposedly backs up, I would presume, the 20%.
Tell me about the 20%.
You know, you don't have to name names, but who's told you what?
What sorts of things have you heard from real people?
Well, from real people, I've heard that, you know, I can't give away their names, obviously, because they'd get in trouble or get killed or something like that.
It's just that the things that they're finding, they're just terrestrial.
They're not extraterrestrial.
They can be accounted for by humans working on something with unlimited budgets over time.
Eventually, they're going to solve these problems.
And so what they're seeing, high-tensile strength metals, temperatures, we'll say gauges that don't need a human to read it with his eyeball, but could operate something with telepathy.
It's a matter of, well, deduction.
You basically trial and error.
You know, we know we want to get from A to B and we want to connect the two points.
You know, meaning I don't want to have to always turn a knob to operate something.
Okay, so the people you've talked to have what have they worked on these things?
Have they found these things?
I'm just trying to get my head around this.
Yeah, mostly recovery.
So they've found them or they've been looking for them.
I found them.
Just crashed, crashed, crashed UFOs.
Okay.
Whereabouts?
U.S. U.K. U.S. So you've talked to people who found stuff.
Right.
And did they, these people that you've talked to, have they kept any of this stuff?
Well, I would, you know, if I were them, but, you know, they're also, you know, going to get court-martialed and killed and all that kind of stuff.
I would.
But they say, no, they can't do it.
You know, they're searched.
You said court-martialed.
Does that mean some of these people are in the military?
Oh, yeah, they're all military.
Yeah.
Well, but, you know, or are in military or were in the military.
Now they're out.
You know, so they're civilian now, but they're still afraid.
In Ian Fleming's literature that you've based a lot of this on, are there clues to things that he thought, in your belief, might happen in the future?
Well, right.
In Moonraker, he, in 1955, he said that the Drax, before he was going to launch his missile into London with a nuclear warhead he got from the Russians via submarine, that he was ready to make a killing in the stock market.
So I'm worried that the people who did 9-11 have been reading James Bond novels because he's foretelling events.
In fact, also in the book of The Spy Who Loved Me, he has them burning some buildings down using thermite.
He's dropping all kinds of tradecraft in his book that you can see later is being used in real operations.
And he's trying to warn us about these things that, you know, thermite would be used and it'd be hard to trace.
But if he was an intelligence man, then he would have known about the use of thermite.
People in that game do.
That's not predicting necessarily anything necessarily happening with it, like the bringing down of the Twin Towers, is it?
Or is it?
Well, no, but in the aggregate, it does.
But I was saying Moonraker, he was going to launch a missile into London, but before that happened, he had set up some short, you know, the evil character was going to make a killing in the stock market.
So in other words, big, major terrorist attack, he was going to take advantage of it and make money in the stock market.
So that angle, I don't know I've ever read it anywhere until Moonraker 1955.
This research thing you've done for the book, what are you going to do with it?
All right, you've written a book and some people may buy it and that's nice to have your book read.
But what else are you going to do with this information?
Well, I want to lay my mark on the wall.
Basically, I'm worried that the people of the United States especially are jaded and I don't think another 9-11 attack is going to do it.
I mean, I have no other choice.
You know, we have to go ahead.
If we're going to get ahead, we've got to blow the whistle.
It's called a spoiling attack.
So my idea is that we lay this groundwork.
So if there is another false lag attack, and it's metaphysical, it's something that's really out of this world, that we can say, look, this is bogus.
We're being conned.
We've been warned that this is coming.
I'm not just doing this as sour grapes.
You know, I've already spoken about this ahead of time.
Who did 9-11?
Well, I definitely think the CIA did it, the American Central Intelligence Agency.
You don't hear anything about them being involved in it except for some stock market trading.
That to me is what I call a taboo stealth indicator.
Whenever there's a wake around a radar object, in this case, there's no object, but you see a wake around it.
It seems to point to me that they're at the center of it, the center eye of the storm.
I think the American CIA wasn't making enough money.
There wasn't a war going on, no more Cold War.
They had all these operatives that they had energized during the Afghan-Soviet war.
And so they staged the whole thing.
They needed it.
You know, the money was tight.
During the Clinton era, it was so tight you couldn't even go to like jump school.
I wanted to go to jump school and I said, look, I'll pay for it.
And they said, no, no, no, can't do it.
I mean, when money gets tight like that, people get crazy.
So if you can remember what it was like before, you know, 9-11, money in the military-industrial complex was tight, very tight.
So they needed another boogeyman.
And, you know, Von Braun warned us about it.
He said that first there's going to be rogue nation states, terrorists, asteroids, and the final card will be ET, you know, the fear card.
Von Braun warned us about it.
Yes, to his assistant, Carol Rosen.
You can look it up on internet, you know, Carol Rosen, Von Braun warning, also in my book.
But he lays out these fear cards that the establishment is going to use.
The Illuminati are going to use these fear cards.
And once one fear card's used up, you've got to go to the next one to create enough adequate fear.
So what I'm trying to do in this book, and I have no choice, the facts point me in this direction, is towards a metaphysical 911, you know, a false flag attack of some kind.
What's this got to do with the Nazis in South America?
You're losing me slightly.
Well, the point is that the human beings can make anti-gravity craft.
So it's possible for human beings, if they wanted to now, especially with our advanced versions of these anti-gravity craft, to basically make it look like the aliens have landed, making a treaty with us or being hostile, depends on how they want to play it.
What would you say, Mike, to people who are going to email me when they hear you?
And you're very enthusiastic about this to say, this guy's just read too much fiction.
He needs to do a reality check.
What do you want to tell them?
Well, I would say the book is full of facts.
You know, Ian Fleming actually said these things.
You look what he says, and then you go back to the facts.
Werner von Braun actually said these things.
These events actually happened.
We actually had UFOs with slag coming out of them.
You know, C-46 plane getting shot down.
Kenneth Arnold.
I mean, all these things are girded in truth.
Just like Ian Fleming said, everything I write has precedent in truth.
Ian Fleming himself said this.
And, you know, in the end of his novel, You Only Live Twice, he cryptically writes his own obituary and says that he could not speak freely.
That basically he's under the Official Secrets Act and he has to write, you know, in fiction and drop hints.
So, you know, all we have to do is go point by point.
You know, I say to people who don't like anything that I bring up, let's go point by point.
No, most of the time people won't do that.
They just already made their mind up and they're angry and they give you like a paragraph of complaints.
All right.
Well, let's wind it back then, Mike.
Let's make it very, very clear for those people who will email me.
Give me a timeline then and tell me what's happened to date.
Tell me the story.
Okay, 1945.
Well, we'll start 1930s.
Fleming is working for MI6 through Reuters.
19, we'll say 39 to 45, he's working for Naval Intelligence Division, second in command to Admiral Godfrey.
He goes to Camp X, 41, writes, well, actually a little before that, he writes the OSS charter for Donovan, goes to Camp X, becomes trained as a commando.
1945, he busts Borman out, is extremely depressed.
Others have said he might have even been involved in the extraction of Hitler and Braun, like Greg Hallett in his book, Hitler was a British Agent.
That's a possibility.
We know for a fact he was very depressed at the end of World War II and was drinking heavily until he decided to do something about it and write a novel.
And the novel was Casino Royale, 1953.
And that novel coincides with Information Research Division.
No, right.
In IRD, he was working for them, which is a part of MI6.
And he met a Soviet defector.
So he writes Casino Royale, to be positive publicity for the IRD Information Research Department.
So he writes Casino Royale, hoping it'll help British reputation.
The books start becoming popular.
He gets discovered by John F. Kennedy, who puts him on his reading list.
He becomes very popular.
He starts cutting movie deals successfully, finally, with broccoli and Saltzman.
The movies start taking off and making millions and millions, billions of dollars.
And unfortunately, he runs out of gas.
While he's writing these novels, people don't know he's working for Kemsley newspaper nine months out of 12.
He's only there in Jamaica three months.
They make it sound like he's just a beach bum.
No, he's a workaholic type A personality guy.
So anyway, he dies in 1964 from a heart attack, which some people suggest may have been helped.
Someone may have been worried about him writing about the Kennedy assassination because he was a friend of Kennedy's.
So he may have been silenced.
That way it's easy when you're not taking care of yourself.
What do you think he knew about the Kennedy assassination?
I think he knew that Alan Dulles murdered Kennedy because Dulles botched the Bay of Pigs thing and Kennedy said he was going to break the CIA up and he fired Dulles.
But as I point out in my book, he kept Dulles on as director for the rest of the year.
You know, you don't fire somebody and let them hang around the office for a whole year to sabotage your business.
Well, unless you think that when they're outside the tent, they're going to do you some damage.
Well, right.
Well, you know, he was there plenty of time, had plenty of time to set up a conspiracy to murder Kennedy.
And the facts are that Director Helms actually quoted as saying that he was part of the cabal, including Alan Dulles, that murdered Kennedy.
It wasn't just these low-ranking Cubans that are mad.
Those are the people, maybe operatives.
But Clay Shaw and all those guys are just the lower-ranking people executing the policy and the direction from Alan Dulles.
And Dulles may have been involved in FDR's murder because at the end of World War II, Dulles, who was a traitor, he was working for the Germans, was under surveillance by FDR.
And FDR had tapes, you know, monitoring his conversation during.
He was going to put him up for treason.
And then, of course, FDR died.
Now, no one wanted to do an autopsy of FDR, which would have possibly shown he was poisoned.
So the thing is that Dulles was a scoundrel.
He was a terrible traitor.
So I think that Fleming and the man who, the man with the golden gun, has got cryptic hints in the book that Alan Dulles is the man with the golden gun.
You see, if I knew lots of secret stuff like that, and I was coming to a late stage in my life, I'm not sure whether I want to write it cryptically in a book or a series of books.
I think I probably, if I wanted to tell anybody about it, I'd either go brief somebody very close to me for them to bring this information out after my death, or write it all down, put it in a safe, and then have it discovered after I'm dead.
That's the way I would do it.
Well, who's to say that hasn't happened?
You know, you bring up a very good point that I wasn't going to offer.
But yes, what you're saying is probably true.
There is probably somewhere some more stuff from Ian Fleming where it's totally, totally nonfiction.
But it needs to be found.
I will say no more.
And you said that you talked to the British guy who'd worked with Fleming in this special British team that helped to bust out Borman, yeah?
Yes, Christopher Crichton.
Yes, sir.
And what's he told you?
Well, he told me that basically he was the second in command of British Naval Intelligence and he had clout.
And so if he says something's going to happen, it's going to happen.
And that they basically made their mind up they were going to do this and the entire establishment was behind him.
So he felt that he was tight-lipped because he was still working for the establishment.
I mean, he's he's not really, he never left British Naval Intelligence.
And did he tell you why he wanted you to know this stuff now?
Why, you know, he wanted this confirmation for you to come out now?
Did he explain that to you?
Well, he's already put it out together in his book, 1997, you know, 96, 97, and it didn't, you know, it didn't cause the stir that he was hoping that it was going to cause.
I think it was suppressed knowledge and all that.
But I think he wants these heroes, which he is a hero.
He won't say it.
He wants these heroes to get the credit that they're due, which is that they did amazing things for England.
And we should respect them for what they're doing and be like them.
You know, James Bond is real.
It means we need to be like James Bond.
We need to go find out.
Every James Bond story, Fleming is saying, get out and go find out.
Get to the bottom of it.
Well, he may well have done good things for England, but getting Martin Borman out and giving him a free passage in return for money doesn't sound so good to me.
Well, true, but maybe that's probably why the story is being suppressed.
You know, it doesn't sound too good.
So it's a dirty stain on, you know, a big story that might be very honorable in many other ways.
Well, right.
I mean, the fact that these guys took the daring of going to the middle of Berlin in 1945 and pulled this off is definitely worthy of our admiration.
You can always admire our enemies, you know, aspects of their behavior that are, you know, above reproach.
You know, it takes courage to canoe, you know, paddle a canoe, you know, in the middle of a city, falling to the Russians and all that.
And he says that in his book, that Borman showed courage, you know, during the escape.
But, you know, we have to take the enemy and find out why they're screwed up.
I mean, the basic problem of the Nazis is snobbery.
They think they're better than everybody else.
But the Nazis still exist in South America.
The heirs to the Nazis anyway do.
But you say that in the main, they've given up on the aims of the first generation, the ones who got out.
Yes, they've got a more kindler, gentler Nazi fascism, which is an idea that, you know, the nation state needs to be supreme in the mind of the people, and they work through corporations.
And have you talked to anybody in South America today in 2012 who's confirmed that for you?
Well, yes, yes, I do.
I have somebody there who's confirmed that there's a lot of underground digging going on because he's kind of in the construction business himself.
So, you know.
All right.
But he said that there's underground digging to look for the remnants of underground bases that these people.
Oh, no.
No, no.
No, it's just, no, it's been construction all along.
There's been construction since the end of World War II of underground stuff.
Not wish it was searching.
So they're still building it.
Yeah, they're still building stuff underground.
For what?
Well, it's just like renovations.
Like you have a house, you know, you want to renovate.
So if you're already underground, you want to increase your space.
You know what I mean?
You're not stagnant.
You're not going to just stay with what you got.
And as far as you know, what is there?
Let's spell that out very clearly.
I want to be very clear.
What is there in South America?
I think for sure there are underground bases and they have a military industrial complex where they're researching and improving their anti-gravity craft.
They have unlimited funds through legitimate enterprises.
So these people are trying to break the code, so to speak, on time, anything that mad scientists want.
And they've passed it on to the second generation.
And they've got technology that they have been using to influence governments like our government, your government.
But in the end, do you think that if they have that technology and they're using it out of South America, they're going to try and take the world over by themselves?
That's what the Nazis wanted to do in the first place, isn't it?
Right, but they wanted to do it at first by outward, overtly military conquest.
Now they're using it by infiltration.
They're trying to influence the world, take over the world by their ideals.
The ideal of fascism is that your nation state is put on the pedestal and the people in the country work through the corporations to glorify the nation state.
That Nazi attitude is taking hold here in the United States.
And people like Farrell and Henry Stevens, well, mostly Farrell.
Stevens, a little too much of a cheerleader for me, but Farrell is saying there's a price to pay when you take all this, you know, black sun technology and you start admiring it.
And that price is you start thinking like a fascist, that everyone needs to just shut up and just go along with whatever the government's directing or the corporations are directing and, you know, herd together like cattle.
I say if the people come together and no one's thinking the whole crowd's going to go over a cliff together because no one's saying, wait a minute, anyone bothered to think maybe this is not such a good idea.
And that's the strength of democracy is that people who are not on the, you know, whatever the latest bandwagon is are at what-ifing things to make sure that we're doing the right thing.
And that's the strength of why we won World War II, at least to a point anyway, is we were able to what-if things.
You know, if Hitler says we're making the ME262 into a fighter bomber, you say, well, sir, that's not a good idea.
You know, go out and shoot this guy.
That's fascism.
Mike Sparks, tell me about you.
I should have asked you at the beginning, though.
What's your background?
Are you a military man?
What's your story?
Well, I'm a 30-plus-year military veteran.
I was in the Marine Corps in the Army, infantry, ground combat officer, airborne paratrooper type guy.
And my career began, you know, like normally you do, where you're running around in the woods with a rifle.
And one time, one drill weekend, I almost froze to death because the equipment we had was so crappy.
And I found out later we didn't want the good gear because if we had the cold weather equipment, this is in Wisconsin now, we would get sent to Norway.
And I go, Well, who doesn't want to go to Norway?
But our unit didn't want to go to Norway.
So, annual training, we'd always go to California.
I said, we can always go to California and to Disneyland and the beach.
But anyway, so I almost, I got hypothermia.
And that's a start of me on a quest.
There's got to be a better way of, you know, being out in the woods to not freeze to death, you know, stay dry, not over exert yourself and get, you know, hypothermia from your sweat even.
And I discovered from research that the British in the Falklands were using Gore-Tex.
So I researched Gore-Tex and started buying Gore-Tex on my own through, you know, sporting goods stores.
And I became kind of like Q in the James Bond movies.
I'm saying, look, we need a better piece of equipment than this.
Why don't we tweak this a little bit?
Why don't we use Gore-Tex?
Get rid of these field jackets, which are field sponges.
I've got to bring you back to the subject here because it's very, very important.
These people who email me will say, this guy's read too much fiction.
He's a fantasist.
He doesn't really know anything.
Give me something definitive that I can give back to them.
Well, I'm a leading military reformer in the United States.
You can see some of the works.
I've got web pages where we deal with concrete, tangible stuff like sensor security fences.
You can go to Defense Review, read that article.
You can go read our book, Air Mech Strike, Asymmetric Maneuver Warfare for the 21st Century.
We've got a book on it.
And this is all hardware-driven stuff.
These are tangible stuff.
It's not fantasy.
I live in the world of hardware.
And the stuff about Ian Fleming and the Nazis and Britain's secret activities and, in fact, other nations' secret activities, do you think that there will be more proof of the stuff that you've just told me coming out in future?
Can we expect that?
Maybe from you, somebody else, maybe?
It's already come out.
I mean, you've got Henry Stevens and Farrell writing about it all the time, and they're making important points.
Even though the daily, was it Telegraph that just came out a few days ago saying that Eisenhower met with Nordic aliens?
It's a telegraph, yeah, in England.
And Nordic is code word to me of Nazis.
You know, they're aliens that supposedly look like, you know, tall, fair-skinned humans.
Well, tall, fair-skinned humans are Nazis, generally speaking.
I think there are a lot of tall, fair-skinned people, including myself, who might disagree with that.
I'll let that pass for now.
Yeah, yeah.
You know what I mean?
You're a model human being.
They're an ideal human being.
That's what they're doing.
So it doesn't necessarily have to be from an outer space that these Nordics come visit Eisenhower, but who's kind of gullible.
So what I'm doing now is writing a second book, a sequel.
So it's James Bond is Real 2, Bodyguard of Spies.
And in that book, I'm going to cover this strange case of Dwight D. Eisenhower, how he is used as a pawn for oil interests, you know, turning the United States into oil-driven economy instead of train-driven.
United States, 3,000 miles across.
We should be hand-mile trains crisscross this country instead of people getting 50,000 people killed each year in car crashes, you know, to keep the oil companies rich.
Well, Mike Sparks, you've taken me on one hell of a journey.
Thank you for it.
And I wish you well with the books, both of them.
And thank you for coming on The Unexplained.
All you got to do is just go to jamesbondisForreal.com, my website, and you see some more details, hardware, facts.
The controversial views of Mike Sparks and his book is James Bond is for Real.
And I'll put a link to details of it and how you can get it on the website, triple w.theunexplained.tv.
Thank you very much for your continuing support.
Please keep that support coming.
If you want to give me feedback or make a donation to allow this work to continue, get to www.theunexplained.tv.
That's the website.
Thank you to Adam Cornwell at Creative Hotspot in Liverpool for getting the website designed and devised like it is and updated like it is, one of the best websites that I've ever seen and also for getting the show out to you.
So Adam, thank you for your great work and above all, thank you to you for supporting me for all the nice things you've said and for the great kindnesses that you've done me.
My name is Howard Hughes.
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