

SpyCast
SpyCast
SpyCast, the official podcast of the International Spy Museum, is a journey into the shadows of international espionage. Each week, host Sasha Ingber brings you the latest insights and intriguing tales from spies, secret agents, and covert communicators, with a focus on how this secret world reaches us all in our everyday lives. Tune in to discover the critical role intelligence has played throughout history and today. Brought to you from Airwave, Goat Rodeo, and the International Spy Museum. The Spy Museum does not endorse, approve, or support the opinions stated by guest speakers. Statements made by speakers do not represent the position or opinion of the International Spy Museum.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 24, 2026 • 39min
Fake Shahs and Exfiltrations: Memories from CIA's Former Disguise Chief
Jonna Mendez knows how to blend in and when to stand out. Starting out as a secretary at the CIA, she left as its Chief of Disguise. Her career took her into denied areas, where her special abilities assisted in a variety of high stakes operations - collecting on the adversary, recruiting and exfiltrating agents, and staying on the cutting edge of technology. She sits down with Sasha to discuss stories, many of which she has never shared before.
Subscribe to Sasha's Substack, HUMINT, to get more intelligence stories:
https://sashaingber.substack.com/
For more information about the International Spy Museum, visit:
https://www.spymuseum.org/
And if you have feedback or want to hear about a particular topic, you can reach us by email at spycast@spymuseum.org.
This show is brought to you by N2K Networks, Goat Rodeo, and the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC. This episode was produced by Flora Warshaw and the team at Goat Rodeo. At the International Spy Museum, Mike Mincey and Memphis Vaughan III are our video editors. Emily Rens is our graphic designer. Joshua Troemel runs our SPY social media. Amanda Ohlke is our Director of Adult Education and Mira Cohen is the Vice President of Programs.

Mar 17, 2026 • 41min
When the CIA Lost a Nuclear Device in India
In the 1960s, the CIA lost a plutonium-fueled generator on top of a mountain in India. The generator was supposed to power an unmanned listening station, intended to pick up signals from China’s missile tests. But when mountaineers ascended the near 26,000-ft Nanda Devi – under the guise of studying the environment – weather got in their way. They left the nuclear device behind and months later, when they returned, it was gone. New York Times reporter Jeffrey Gettleman reconstructed this event with a team of journalists. The story took about seven years, thousands of miles, and earning the trust of many men who had grown old and have since passed away.
Subscribe to Sasha's Substack, HUMINT, to get more intelligence stories:
https://sashaingber.substack.com/
For more information about the International Spy Museum, visit:
https://www.spymuseum.org/
And if you have feedback or want to hear about a particular topic, you can reach us by email at spycast@spymuseum.org.
This show is brought to you by N2K Networks, Goat Rodeo, and the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC. This episode was produced by Flora Warshaw and the team at Goat Rodeo. At the International Spy Museum, Mike Mincey and Memphis Vaughan III are our video editors. Emily Rens is our graphic designer. Joshua Troemel runs our SPY social media. Amanda Ohlke is our Director of Adult Education and Mira Cohen is the Vice President of Programs.

7 snips
Mar 10, 2026 • 41min
AI Companions May Be China's Next Recruitment Tool
Chip Usher, a former senior CIA officer now advising on AI and intelligence, examines AI companions and their national-security risks. He discusses why China leads in emotionally engaging apps, how companions collect data and enable influence, and the dangers of synthetic personas, deepfakes, and agentic cyber tools. The conversation spotlights privacy, recruitment risks, and the urgent need for policy and protections.

Mar 3, 2026 • 39min
Roald Dahl: The Spy Behind the Storyteller
Aaron Tracy, writer and creator of The Secret World of Roald Dahl, explores Dahl’s secret life in wartime Washington as an MI6 operative using charm and influence. He traces Dahl’s crash-turned career shift, high-society seductions to shape U.S. opinion, ties to the Roosevelts, and how spy years fed his later fiction. The conversation frames a brilliant but conflicted life.

Feb 24, 2026 • 41min
In Bed With Beijing: The Double Agent Who Seduced Her FBI Handler
Steve Conley, retired FBI counterintelligence agent who worked the Katrina Leung (Parlor Maid) matter, gives a first-hand account. He recounts how Leung gained elite access, why her handler's intimate relationship blinded the bureau, and how surveillance, polygraphs, and staged ruses exposed a sprawling double life that shook agency trust.

Feb 17, 2026 • 33min
Exfiltrating María Corina Machado from Venezuela
Before Delta Force captured Nicolás Maduro, Bryan Stern went on a secret mission in Venezuela. The veteran and Purple Heart recipient was there to extract opposition leader María Corina Machado, who had been living in hiding for her own safety. Bryan was trying to get María to Oslo to accept her Nobel Peace Prize. This daring operation – named Operation Golden Dynamite after Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite – involved land, sea, and air. This is just one of many high-stakes evacuations Bryan has conducted through his nonprofit organization, Grey Bull Rescue. Sasha and Bryan sat down to discuss the operation, just a few days after he returned from Venezuela.
Subscribe to Sasha's Substack, HUMINT, to get more intelligence stories:
https://sashaingber.substack.com/
For more information about the International Spy Museum, visit:
https://www.spymuseum.org/
And if you have feedback or want to hear about a particular topic, you can reach us by email at spycast@spymuseum.org.
This show is brought to you by N2K Networks, Goat Rodeo, and the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC. This episode was produced by Flora Warshaw and the team at Goat Rodeo. At the International Spy Museum, Mike Mincey and Memphis Vaughan III are our video editors. Emily Rens is our graphic designer. Joshua Troemel runs our SPY social media. Amanda Ohlke is our Director of Adult Education and Mira Cohen is the Vice President of Programs.

Feb 10, 2026 • 37min
Hezbollah’s Long Game in Latin America
Wes Tabor, former DEA agent who led operations against Hezbollah financing in Latin America, explains the group's long-term presence and criminal networks. He recounts undercover takedowns like Operation Titan. He discusses Venezuela as a permissive safe haven, links with cartels and corrupt officials, and how shifting geopolitics reshape Hezbollah’s footprint in the region.

Feb 3, 2026 • 36min
Building the US’s First Known Gang Intelligence Database in Latin America
As an agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) who later embedded with the CIA, Wes Tabor worked to dismantle criminal networks in Central and South America - think gangs like MS-13, the Sinaloa Cartel, and Tren de Aragua. In 2006, he was stationed in Guatemala, a transit corridor for South American cocaine to enter the US. It was during this time that he created a gang intelligence system to help identify gang members, using biodata and records from regional prisons and police departments. As confirmed by two retired DEA agents, the FBI then took the database and made it their own. This is how it happened.
*Clarification: The US arrested Guatemala's anti-drug chief in 2009, while three high-ranking, anti-narcotics police officers were arrested by the U.S. in 2005.
Subscribe to Sasha's Substack, HUMINT, to get more intelligence stories:
https://sashaingber.substack.com/
For more information about the International Spy Museum, visit:
https://www.spymuseum.org/
And if you have feedback or want to hear about a particular topic, you can reach us by email at spycast@spymuseum.org.
This show is brought to you by N2K Networks, Goat Rodeo, and the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC. This episode was produced by Flora Warshaw and the team at Goat Rodeo. At the International Spy Museum, Mike Mincey and Memphis Vaughan III are our video editors. Emily Rens is our graphic designer. Joshua Troemel runs our SPY social media. Amanda Ohlke is our Director of Adult Education and Mira Cohen is the Vice President of Programs.

Jan 27, 2026 • 41min
Looking Back on the US Invasion of Panama
This January marks the anniversary of the conclusion of Operation Just Cause, which began days before Christmas, on December 20th, 1989, when about 27,000 US troops deployed to Panama. Their mission was to capture Panama’s notorious dictator, General Manuel Noriega, whom the US had indicted for drug trafficking. Noriega had also been suppressing unarmed demonstrators, gathering intelligence on the local population, and harassing Americans- wielding weapons from the Soviet bloc. International Spy Museum Executive Director Chris Costa was an intelligence officer on the ground during the invasion, and he takes us from the first mortar to the moment when Noriega surrendered to US forces.
Subscribe to Sasha's Substack, HUMINT, to get more intelligence stories:
https://sashaingber.substack.com/
For more information about the International Spy Museum, visit:
https://www.spymuseum.org/
And if you have feedback or want to hear about a particular topic, you can reach us by email at spycast@spymuseum.org,
This show is brought to you by Goat Rodeo, N2K Networks, and the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC. This episode was produced by Flora Warshaw and the team at Goat Rodeo. At the International Spy Museum, Mike Mincey and Memphis Vaughan III are our video editors. Emily Rens is our graphic designer. Joshua Troemel runs our SPY social media. Amanda Ohlke is our Director of Adult Education and Mira Cohen is the Vice President of Programs.

Jan 20, 2026 • 32min
Directing The Night Manager
Georgie (Georgi) Banks-Davies, a television director known for season two of The Night Manager, explains adapting le Carré’s world for TV. She talks about balancing realism with drama. She describes shooting in Colombia and on-location challenges. She reflects on gender in spy cinema and reshaping spy tropes through complex female characters.


