The Spy They Trained to Spot Lies Just Called the Biggest One in the Room
He spent two decades in a unit the Pentagon won’t admit exists. The job? Deciding which threats are real. Read this before you decide whether to believe him... because the answer isn’t what you think.
The Spy They Trained to Spot Lies Just Called the Biggest One in the Room
He spent two decades in a unit the Pentagon won’t admit exists. The job? Deciding which threats are real. Read this before you decide whether to believe him... because the answer isn’t what you think... and it’s about to land in YOUR lap.
The Jack Hopkins Now Newsletter #965: Saturday, July 10th, 2026
Let me be blunt with you.
Almost everything you think you know about who decides what’s a “threat” in this country is wrong. It doesn’t get decided on cable news. It doesn’t get decided by the guy at the podium.
It gets decided...quietly...years earlier...by people you will never see...in a building with no sign out front.
Joe Kent was one of those people.
Not a pundit. Not a staffer. An operator inside Task Force Orange...the intelligence shop so secretive…it changes its own name every time you get warm. Gray Fox. Centra Spike. Cemetery Wind. Same ghosts...new name tag.
His entire profession came down to one brutal question...asked in the dark...over and over...with lives on the line:
Is this threat real...or not?
Burn that sentence into your brain. You’re going to watch this man answer it twice. And the two answers…are going to leave a mark.
(You might be thinking this story…about Joe Kent, is “yesterday’s” news. That would be an error in thinking.)
First... the part that should make you put down your coffee.
His wife did the same kind of work. Shannon. Navy cryptologist. Four languages. Two little boys at home...one still in diapers. Fifth deployment.
January 2019. A town in Syria called Manbij. An ISIS suicide bomber. And just like that…she’s the first American servicewoman killed by enemy fire in that country.
Now...you want me to paint the scene at Dover...where he went to wait for her body. The tarmac. The face. The weather.
I won’t. I wasn’t there...you weren’t there...and the people who were don’t owe us a movie.
Here’s what’s on the record...and it’s enough:
A dignified transfer is the most exact ceremony the U.S. military owns...the flag pulled drum-tight over a case the precise size of somebody’s worst day...carried at a pace slow enough to crack your teeth.
The President was there. He gave condolences. He asked about Syria. What else passed between them...nobody wrote down. So we don’t pretend.
Grief is fuel. This grief did not stay in the family.
It became a politics.
Two runs for Congress out in Washington State. Two losses. And this is where a softer story fades to black...the widower...the podcast...the slow drift into irrelevance.
Except that’s not what happened.
The ghost got handed the keys to the whole haunted house.
February 2025: nominated to run the National Counterterrorism Center. The nerve center. The place built after 9/11 for exactly one reason...so all the secret shops would quit hoarding puzzle pieces…and finally assemble one clean picture…of what’s coming to kill you.
The man from the unit that doesn’t exist. Promoted to chief librarian of every threat the government tracks.
Senate vote: 52 to 44. Which...translated out of Washington...means: held our nose and confirmed him anyway.
And…now…the sentence I told you to burn in comes back to collect.
There was an email. There’s always an email.
Spring 2025. The career analysts...the ones whose entire job is telling you what you don’t want to hear...looked hard at the administration’s claim that Venezuela’s government was running a street gang into America like a weapon.
A claim that just happened to be the load-bearing wall…under a deportation program.
The analysts looked. And they said: we don’t see it.
So what did Kent do?
He asked them to write it again.
Rework the document...he put it...so it couldn’t be “used against” the President or his boss. Sure...maybe nobody in Caracas is technically pulling the strings...but flooding the country with gang members is a hostile act...and the assessment just needed to reflect... in his words... “basic common sense.”
The analysts held the line.
Their supervisor...the straightest arrow in the building...by his colleagues’ account... got walked out of his job.
And the stubborn...inconvenient assessment? It stood.
Meanwhile the men that program already grabbed were being marched...heads down... matching white uniforms...into a Salvadoran mega-prison for a photo the entire planet got to see. That picture is real. Look it up.
Then sit with this:
A document nobody was ever supposed to read…was the last thing in that whole machine still telling the truth.
Remember what this man does for a living. He decides which threats are real.
Now…watch the needle flip.
February 28... 2026. The U.S. and Israel hit Iran... and the region came apart so fast your ears rang.
The Strait of Hormuz... corked shut.
A yacht bolting from Dubai’s port with a wall of black smoke stacking up behind it.
Dubai International...one of the busiest airports on Earth...going dark. Flights simply ceasing to exist. Tourists stranded in the marble with their roller bags.
Oil up. Gas up. A war you could feel in the price of everything.
And the reason for all of it?
Pick one. Seriously...pick one. They ran a buffet:
The nuclear program.
The ballistic missiles.
The regime itself...which the President all but invited the Iranian people to go topple.
The oil and gas...which the administration was reported to want to capture (a line I’d have rejected as too on-the-nose in fiction).
A war Israel’s prime minister lobbied for...and a Saudi crown prince reportedly pushed over multiple phone calls.
The official basis...straight from the White House podium? That the President’s decision rested on a “feeling based on fact.”
A German paper ran the whole thing under a four-word headline: war aim unknown.
And…before you write that off as some fringe take...that’s the Wall Street Journal reporting the case for war “faces growing scrutiny.” That’s the New Yorker asking...in print... whether a man can win a war he can’t explain starting.
The fog was real. The fog was on the record.
And…into that fog walked Joe Kent...and quit. Out loud. In writing. Where everyone could see.
Iran...he wrote...had never been a real threat. The war was manufactured...driven... he said... by Israel and its lobby.
His defenders call that plain honesty.
His critics call it an old and ugly libel in a policy suit.
He named his dead wife in the letter. He’d already buried her behind one war he believed was a lie. He would not help sell the next one.
So here’s the part where I’m supposed to tell you which man to believe.
I can’t. And neither...if you’re honest...can you.
Because they’re the same man.
The one who leaned on the analysts to make a threat look bigger. And the one who kicked the door off the hinges…swearing a threat had been invented out of thin air. Same guy. Same hands. Twelve months apart.
Maybe walking out of the machine is exactly what let him finally see the machine.
Maybe…a man who spent 20 years…learning precisely how a threat gets inflated…would know...better than you...better than me...the instant he watched it happen again.
Or…maybe a man who spent 20 years…learning how to bend the truth…just bent it one last time...in a prettier direction...and dared you to stand up and cheer.
The record does not resolve it. I’ve run it forward and backward…and it will not break either way. It just keeps handing you back the same two men…and the same single body between them.
And it asks you to choose.
That was his job...you understand. Deciding which threats are real.
Read this far and here’s the uncomfortable part:
It was always going to be yours...too.
BONUS: The Mystery of Task Force Orange
You caught the name. Task Force Orange. Let me tell you why it keeps slipping through your fingers.
Start with what we actually know...because it’s more than you’d think...and a lot less than you’d like.
What’s known:
It’s real. It’s the Intelligence Support Activity...the Army’s own in-house spy shop... born in 1981 out of the smoking wreckage of Operation Eagle Claw…the hostage rescue that died in the Iranian desert before it ever reached Tehran. The lesson the Pentagon swallowed: never go in blind again. So they built a unit whose entire job is to go in first...and see.
They don’t kick doors. They find the door. Human sources and intercepted signals...the quiet work that happens weeks before Delta Force or SEAL Team Six ever load a helicopter.
Follow the fingerprints and there they are...locating a kidnapped general in Italy... plucking Pablo Escobar’s phone calls out of the Colombian air...hunting Saddam... feeding the machine that eventually found bin Laden.
They dress like you. No uniforms. Beards. Civilian clothes. An operator could be the guy next to you at the gate...roller bag and all.
And they swap names like socks. Centra Spike. Gray Fox. Torn Victor. Cemetery Wind. Every time a reporter gets warm...new nametag...fresh smoke.
What’s not known:
Their current name. Nobody outside the wire knows what they’re called this year.
Their faces. The unit is locked down so tight that reporters have gone hunting for a single clear photograph and come back with nothing.
How you get in...and what they put you through once you’re being looked at. Fragments leak out...assessment…selection…psych evals…a Green Beret pedigree... but the real pipeline stays black.
Even the “known” part is secondhand. Almost everything above comes from a handful of journalists…a few memoirs…and declassified scraps...not from anybody official standing up and confirming a word of it. The Pentagon’s default answer is that the unit doesn’t exist.
And…here’s the one that should stand the hair up on your neck... the question that started this whole thing:
What do they do at home?
Here’s the honest answer...and honesty is the entire point of this piece...nobody has produced credible proof of Task Force Orange running operations on American soil recently.
That is not the same as proof that they don’t.
You cannot prove a negative…about a unit the government won’t admit is real. That’s the trap. That’s the design.
Which is why the “mystery of Task Force Orange” isn’t a fun little trivia box at the bottom of an article.
It’s the exact engine this whole story runs on.
A unit that decides what counts as a threat...in the dark...with no name…no face…no photograph…and…no reliable way on Earth for you to check its work. Staffed by people like Joe Kent. Feeding the picture that lands on a President’s desk.
You want to know whether you can trust the threat assessment?
Then you’re going to have to decide how much you trust the ghosts who wrote it.
And they were never going to let you see their faces.
#HoldFast
Back soon.
-Jack
Jack Hopkins
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Sources
Every fact in this piece is documented; nothing is invented. Kent’s claim about Israel and “the lobby” is presented as his contested assertion…not as fact…and the competing war rationales are kept in on purpose so no single tidy villain gets handed to you.
Task Force Orange / Intelligence Support Activity
Kent’s reported ISA/Task Force Orange service — Tech Inquiry
Spec Ops Profile: Intelligence Support Activity — Military.com
Shannon Kent, Manbij, and Dover
Who Is Joe Kent? Wife, Military Career & NCTC Resignation — PNMMedia
Former Green Beret Joe Kent Takes the Reins at the NCTC — SOFREP via MSN
Congressional runs and NCTC confirmation (52–44)
Senate confirms Joe Kent for counterterrorism agency — AP via KPTV
US Senate confirms Joe Kent to lead a national intelligence agency — Washington State Standard
The Tren de Aragua assessment (”used against,” “basic common sense,” analysts held, supervisor removed)
Counterterrorism nominee Joe Kent pushed for edits to intelligence assessment — CBS News
US official’s email on gang assessment sparks concern — Reuters via Rappler
Statement of Vice Chairman Warner on Kent’s confirmation — U.S. Senate
Anatomy of the politicization of US intelligence (timeline) — Wesley Wark
Declassified ODNI emails — The Post Millennial (administration-friendly counterpoint)
The 2026 Iran war and its contested rationale (”feeling based on fact,” “war aim unknown,” “growing scrutiny”)
Rationale for the 2026 Iran war — Wikipedia (aggregates Washington Post & Times of Israel reporting)
2026 Iran war — Britannica (Dubai/Jebel Ali smoke, halted flights)
U.S. Conflict with Iran, stated objectives — Congressional Research Service (PDF)
Kent’s resignation over the Iran war




We had the same issues in the Submarine Force. The senior people in the Pentagon and maybe the fleet type commanders were given the picture of the forest. This us in the trenches, on the boats had only two missions, execute your orders and don't get detected. We were a tree looking at the gaps in the other trees. We knew the forest was there, we just couldn't see it.
We had government employees who are experts on Iran who were fired, let go two weeks before bombing by USA took place in Iran. Now we have unqualified and ignorant government representatives probably enriching themselves as they "negotiate" a peace deal with Iran. The only thing I can think about the duality of Kent's actions is did he come to a line he couldn't cross? Only he knows. I do know that the American people are going to feel the repercussions from this war for decades. Troops on the ground would be disastrous. Obviously, I am a layperson, but my life instructors are Viet-Nam, Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan. My heart aches because of so many unneccesary deaths.