Andrew Lownie  - KGB or Mossad: Who Was Epstein Selling SECRETS To? episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 18, 2026 · 4 MIN

Andrew Lownie - KGB or Mossad: Who Was Epstein Selling SECRETS To?

from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold

Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for fearless conversations that probe power, secrecy, and the unanswered questions at the heart of elite scandals. 👉 https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Was Jeffrey Epstein more than a financier and fixer — and if sensitive information moved through his orbit, who stood to gain? In this episode of Heretics, royal biographer Andrew Lownie examines the intelligence-sized holes in the Epstein story and why persistent questions about foreign services refuse to disappear. Lownie is careful to separate what is known, what is alleged, and what remains unexplained. He explains why Epstein’s unparalleled access to politicians, royalty, financiers, and scientists created an environment ripe for compromise — even without proof of espionage. The issue, Lownie argues, is not declaring guilt, but understanding risk exposure: who had access to what, who crossed boundaries, and why safeguards appear to have failed. The conversation revisits Prince Andrew’s role as a UK trade envoy and the period during which he maintained contact with Epstein. Lownie outlines why that overlap matters, how diplomatic briefings and commercial intelligence can be sensitive, and why informal channels raise red flags even when nothing is proven. When access goes unchecked, he says, accountability becomes optional — and trust erodes. We also discuss why intelligence questions surface at all. Lownie explains how Epstein’s wealth, mobility, and introductions functioned as currency, and why similar profiles historically attract interest from intelligence agencies. He does not allege recruitment or tasking; instead, he asks why no transparent audit has ever clarified the risks, the contacts, or the controls that should have been in place. Crucially, this episode avoids sensationalism. It focuses on process and oversight — what responsible institutions do when potential compromise exists, and why silence creates suspicion. Lownie describes how historians assess such cases: timelines, access, corroboration, and the absence of inquiry. The unanswered questions, he argues, are themselves a finding. Why does this still matter? Because the Epstein saga intersects with national security, not just personal misconduct. When elites operate beyond scrutiny, the consequences outlast the scandal. Lownie also reflects on the cultural deference that insulated key figures, and why a reluctance to investigate thoroughly has left the public with fragments rather than facts. This isn’t a verdict. It’s a demand for clarity. If nothing improper occurred, transparency would close the chapter. If safeguards failed, the public deserves to know how and why — and who is responsible for fixing it. If you want an evidence-led exploration of how secrets, access, and power collide, and why the most important question may be who else knew, this episode is essential viewing. Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ujjX8qViyWc #AndrewLownie #JeffreyEpstein #NationalSecurity #RoyalAccountability #HereticsPodcast #InvestigativeJournalism #ElitePower #Transparency Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for fearless conversations that probe power, secrecy, and the unanswered questions at the heart of elite scandals. 👉 https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Was Jeffrey Epstein more than a financier and fixer — and if sensitive information moved through his orbit, who stood to gain? In this episode of Heretics, royal biographer Andrew Lownie examines the intelligence-sized holes in the Epstein story and why persistent questions about foreign services refuse to disappear. Lownie is careful to separate what is known, what is alleged, and what remains unexplained. He explains why Epstein’s unparalleled access to politicians, royalty, financiers, and scientists created an environment ripe for compromise — even without proof of espionage. The issue, Lownie argues, is not declaring guilt, but understanding risk exposure: who had access to what, who crossed boundaries, and why safeguards appear to have failed. The conversation revisits Prince Andrew’s role as a UK trade envoy and the period during which he maintained contact with Epstein. Lownie outlines why that overlap matters, how diplomatic briefings and commercial intelligence can be sensitive, and why informal channels raise red flags even when nothing is proven. When access goes unchecked, he says, accountability becomes optional — and trust erodes. We also discuss why intelligence questions surface at all. Lownie explains how Epstein’s wealth, mobility, and introductions functioned as currency, and why similar profiles historically attract interest from intelligence agencies. He does not allege recruitment or tasking; instead, he asks why no transparent audit has ever clarified the risks, the contacts, or the controls that should have been in place. Crucially, this episode avoids sensationalism. It focuses on process and oversight — what responsible institutions do when potential compromise exists, and why silence creates suspicion. Lownie describes how historians assess such cases: timelines, access, corroboration, and the absence of inquiry. The unanswered questions, he argues, are themselves a finding. Why does this still matter? Because the Epstein saga intersects with national security, not just personal misconduct. When elites operate beyond scrutiny, the consequences outlast the scandal. Lownie also reflects on the cultural deference that insulated key figures, and why a reluctance to investigate thoroughly has left the public with fragments rather than facts. This isn’t a verdict. It’s a demand for clarity. If nothing improper occurred, transparency would close the chapter. If safeguards failed, the public deserves to know how and why — and who is responsible for fixing it. If you want an evidence-led exploration of how secrets, access, and power collide, and why the most important question may be who else knew, this episode is essential viewing. Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ujjX8qViyWc #AndrewLownie #JeffreyEpstein #NationalSecurity #RoyalAccountability #HereticsPodcast #InvestigativeJournalism #ElitePower #Transparency Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Andrew Lownie - KGB or Mossad: Who Was Epstein Selling SECRETS To?

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Subscribe to The Daily Heretic for fearless conversations that probe power, secrecy, and the unanswered questions at the heart of elite scandals. 👉 https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Was Jeffrey Epstein more than a financier and...

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