A KGB officer walking into a U.S. consulate can change history fast. Defector walk-ins give the CIA names, methods, and warnings no satellite can see. That’s why HUMINT still matters. #CIA #HUMINT #nationalsecurity
washingtonian.com/2018/02/18…— @Robert4787 Jul 1, 2026
Month: June 2026
Investigative Journalist Tom O’Neill on CIA’s MKUltra Mind-Control Program – YouTube youtube.com/watch?v=3bgEKbdc…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 1, 2026
The CIA’s Greatest Communication Failure Ever | 70% of Global Ops Compromised | Dark Logs #004 – YouTube youtube.com/watch?v=ZAKQuq6C…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Jul 1, 2026
Categories
aprende
More than a thousand years before Arizona became a state, the Hohokam had already cracked the desert’s hardest problem. 🌵 They engineered over 500 miles of irrigation canals through the Sonoran Desert — feeding cities, sustaining crops, and building a civilization in one of the harshest landscapes on earth.
More than a thousand years before Arizona became a state, the Hohokam had already cracked the desert’s hardest problem. 🌵 They engineered over 500 miles of irrigation canals through the Sonoran Desert — feeding cities, sustaining crops, and building a civilization in one of the harshest landscapes on earth.
More than a thousand years before Arizona became a state, the Hohokam had already cracked the desert’s hardest problem. 🌵 They engineered over 500 miles of irrigation canals through the Sonoran Desert — feeding cities, sustaining crops, and building a civilization in one of the harshest landscapes on earth.
More than a thousand years before Arizona became a state, the Hohokam had already cracked the desert’s hardest problem. 🌵 They engineered over 500 miles of irrigation canals through the Sonoran Desert — feeding cities, sustaining crops, and building a civilization in one of the harshest landscapes on earth.
More than a thousand years before Arizona became a state, the Hohokam had already cracked the desert’s hardest problem. 🌵 They engineered over 500 miles of irrigation canals through the Sonoran Desert — feeding cities, sustaining crops, and building a civilization in one of the harshest landscapes on earth.
