Untold Pacific is a podcast series that mines 40 years of James Bradley's life and his four best-selling books to create historical travelogues about the American experience on the other side of the Pacific.
Jeremy Kuzmarov - PHD, Professor, Author, Editor - tells James what's going on.
Dr. Robert Sauer calls for a criminal investigation into the worst public policy mistake since the Vietnam War.
Doug Woodring tells James what we must do to have clean oceans.
Ben Fox of Sheperd.com interviews James on five books about war.
Dr. Tom Dooley convinced Americans there was a “good” South Vietnam and became a media star.
After setting the historical table in Part One, Professor Roberto Rabel dives into his book, New Zealand and the Vietnam War.
Professor Roberto Rabel takes us from New Zealand’s founding to the ANZUS Treaty between New Zealand the United States in 1951.
Dr. Sally Potter tells James about growing up in a volcano’s crater larger than the city Singapore.
James opens a new Untold Pacific chapter with a salute to a great country and people.
Covert Action Magazine interviews James Bradley about China.
Professor Greg Poulgrain tells James a fascinating story about a Goldmine, a President and America's Spy King.
James uncovers the secret behind Ralph Ignatowski's death on Iwo Jima.
John Rubino has profited from bursting financial bubbles since the 1970's and tells James, "You'll sleep better at night if most of your money is in real assets vs. financial assets."
Lt Col. William Astor, USAF (Ret.) tells James the facts.
A former Viet Cong Buffalo-Boy tells James how he destroyed America's high-tech marvel, the Mcnamara Line.
Viet Cong vets tell James that "Military Initiative" was the key.
Veteran Asia correspondent Patrick Lawrence tells James that America's leaders are concerned that China's success could undermine popular support for the worldwide U.S. empire.
Professor Robert Sauer describes the response to a virus as a “monumental government failure,” a “state-run religion” where believers brand truth-tellers as “heretics,” and that Americans are being hit with “phycological napalm."
James recalls a Western tradition on the island of Con Dao.
Chuck Searcy takes us to where American bombs still explode fifty years after they were dropped.
Gareth Porter tells James about the trillions of dollars to be spent upon a fool’s errand.
Asian think-tank executive Eric Stryson tells James what’s happening in Hong Kong, China.
James has a conversation with award-winning journalist Nick Turse.
Michelle Bradley--James's Taipei-based daughter--looks at Asia from Taiwan.
A veteran author tells James that the Russian and North Korean nuclear programs were built upon the wreckage of Japan’s underground WWII atomic experiments.
Professor Victor Gao tells James "War between China and the US would be a calamity for mankind."
Norman Solomon, author of War Made Easy, describes an America in search of enemies.
"Vietnam is the future," says Tom, the world expert on independent travel in Vietnam.
Rob Kirby tells James hard historical truths about hyperinflation leading to conflict at home and abroad.
James discovered the hard way that he was not Jimmy Taylor.
Joel Bauman discusses how to prepare for the coming currency reset.
James traces America’s “China Mirage” from George Washington to today's Hong Kong streets.
David Vine tells James about the Washington national security elite’s “intellectual curiosity about a war between the United States and China.”
Junius Maltby tells James the difference between "Money" and "Currency."
Ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern enlightens James about Russiagate, Obamagate, the Russia-China alliance and the “MICIMATT complex”--the Military Industrial Congressional Intelligence Media Academia Think-Tank complex.
Should the Pulitzers be withdrawn from the Washington Post and New York Times?
Security analyst Michael Klare tells James some hard realities.
In the final episode of the "Iwo Jima" series, James discusses the significance of the flag-raising and the impact it had on winning the war.
James follows his father's footsteps to the Battle of Iwo Jima.
James speaks with Moscow-based journalist Dmitry Babich who discusses America’s new McCarthyism.
James speaks with John Pilger, Australia's greatest living journalist.