> the key to reading the map.
>So you don't know the actual pic that was on that post. Understand now.
>Looking for that image.
We have it now, thanks to Anons.
https://media.128ducks.com/file_store/ab6a6d30af574aff1e56a3f5160126777fffc94b8558ffc1823dafdff45bb92d.jpg
Found this interesting article.
Maybe CF related. I mean why else would his 'it guy' be there? Setting up something? or was he more of an integral player than we've been led to believe?
Anyway - here's an article.
http://archive.today/2017.04.11-020710/http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2016/10/30/world/politics-diplomacy-world/hacked-memo-reveals-details-bill-clintons-2009-meeting-north-koreas-kim-jong-il/%23.WOw6PNLLfK4
A Podesta email from Wikileaks.
During a 2009 visit to Pyongyang to seek the release of two detained American journalists, former U.S. President Bill Clinton raised the issue of abducted Japanese nationals with then-leader Kim Jong Il, ⤢a hacked document released by the secret-spilling site WikiLeaks has shown.
The memo, attached to an email sent to John Podesta, a former Clinton White House chief of staff who joined the ex-president on his mission, is part of a trove of emails released by WikiLeaks.
Podesta, head of the liberal Center for American Progress think tank at the time, now serves as the campaign chair for Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Hillary Clinton痴 White House bid. WikiLeaks has been publishing emails since Oct. 7 from Podesta痴 account, which experts say was targeted by Russian hackers.
Apparently written by David Straub, a Stanford University professor who also took part in the visit, the memo details the unusual meeting with the reclusive Kim, providing a rare glimpse into the thinking of the now-deceased Dear Leader.
The Japan Times attempted to contact Straub to confirm the authenticity of the memo, but had not received a reply as of publication.