07/21/2024 / By Ethan Huff
The guy who laundered conspiracy theories through The Washington Post about Donald Trump conspiring with Russia to steal the 2016 election is married to a South Korean spy who used to work for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), we have learned.
“Forever wars” fanatic Max Boot’s wife Sue Mi Terry, 54, is a native of Seoul currently living in Manhattan who is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), though she is currently on “administrative leave,” a new indictment shows.
Boot, by the way, is The Washington Post‘s “Columnist covering national security.”
Terry reportedly abused her position as a foreign policy expert to trade access to top U.S. officials in exchange for “high-end sushi dinners” and luxury goods, the indictment reveals. We now know that five years after she left the CIA in 2008 and three years before her husband Boot started accusing Trump of being a Russian asset, Terry started spying for South Korea.
Max Boot, spy hunter. pic.twitter.com/asdKE2R46d
— Chad West (@Chad_WestReal) July 17, 2024
Max Boot, one of the chief purveyors of the “Russian asset” narrative, is married to an unregistered foreign agent? And she has been indicted for selling access, accepting bribes, sharing non-public info with South Korean officials, etc.?
That … you couldn’t write that. https://t.co/7gkfFVbWD6
— T. Becket Adams (@BecketAdams) July 17, 2024
(Related: It was actually Barack Obama’s CIA that recruited foreign “allies” to spy on Trump and come up with the Russian collusion hoax.)
Ironically enough, one of the major crimes Terry is accused of involves her alleged disclosure of “sensitive U.S. government information to South Korean intelligence.”
The accusation is that Terry “used her position to influence U.S. policy in favor of South Korea” over the course of about 10 years. In exchange for being South Korea’s errand boy, Terry was awarded with “money and luxury gifts,” according to FBI Acting Assistant Director in Charge Christie M. Curtis.
Between the years of 2001 and 2011, Terry made the rounds working in various high-level U.S. government positions. At one point she was a CIA analyst. She also worked as director of Korea, Japan, and Oceanic Affairs for the White House National Security Council.
For her loyal devotion to South Korea, a fellow spy reportedly bought Terry a Dolce & Gabbana coat from a store in Chevy Chase, Md., in November 2019 right before the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) “pandemic.” Terry reportedly exchanged the coat a few days later for a $4,100 coat from Christian Dior.
Terry and her fellow spies also funneled more than $37,000 to a public policy program on Korean affairs run by Terry, who by the way was never even registered as a foreign agent with the Department of Justice (DOJ). One wonders how she was so easily able to become a U.S. government official wearing many different hats.
In a voluntary interview with the feds, Terry was “visibly nervous,” the indictment says. She later admitted that she had to consult her South Korean handler, this after having claimed in the interview that she did not even know his name.
After posting a $500,000 bond during her initial appearance in Manhattan federal court this week, Terry was released. If convicted, she faces up to five years in prison.
Max Boot co-wrote and WaPo published a column on US Korea relations with his wife who is also a Korean spy. pic.twitter.com/NzDxayA2MS
— Jarvis (@jarvis_best) July 17, 2024
Interestingly, Boot also has close ties to Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), who is also accused of having relations with a spy, that one from communist China.
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Tagged Under:
Collapse, conspiracy, deception, deep state, foreign spy, indictment, Max Boot, national security, propaganda, rigged, Russia, South Korea, spies, Sue Mi Terry, The Washington Post, traitors, treason, Trump, WaPo
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