Not a joke: the Wirecard fugitive, the CIA, and the Financial Times’ “Whoopsie-Daisy” moment. Seriously, picture this: Jan Marsalek, Wirecard’s vanished COO – a man accused of evaporating €1.9 billion into thin air – isn’t sipping piña coladas in some dacha. Nope. In August 2021, as Kabul imploded and the world watched desperate souls cling to departing planes, the CIA slid into his Telegram DMs. Their request ? Jan, darling, got any rogue pilots? Ours are... booked.
A financial fugitive became Langley’s Kabul air-traffic controller
Marsalek’s actual Telegram messages to alleged Bulgarian spy-friend Roussev, finally after years of Wirecard scandals unveiled by the Financial Times in their
'Hot Money' podcast episode 8, reads like a rejected 'Mission: Impossible' script:
“Interesting request from sort of friends at the CIA. They urgently need aircraft to fly out contractors from Afghanistan. All dodgy airlift companies in Russia and Turkey etc. are sold out or refuse to fly because insurance won't cover the loss of an aircraft [in a warzone]. Do you know anyone who’s a bit rogue ?”
Interesting request from the sort of friends from the CIA here. They urgently need aircraft to fly out contractors from Afghanistan. Apparently, all dodgy airlift companies in Russia and Turkey, etc. are already sold out or refuse to fly because insurance won't cover the loss of an aircraft. Do you know anyone who's a bit rogue and operates large scale airplanes ? ... America needs you. Pax Americana rests on your broad and manly shoulders... Just discussing with the Americans... Apparently since 11:00 am today, the airport is ok and 15 military aircraft took off today. But it can change any moment.
Jan Marsalek in August 2021 Telegram chats with Roussev
Roussev, ever the helpful Bulgarian comrade who was taken to court in London as an alleged spy-friend of Jan Marsalek, replies his dad flew guns into Africa. Cue Marsalek’s deadpan:
“Pax Americana rests on your broad and manly shoulders.” They then dive into plane specs, landing rights, and real-time Kabul airport updates like two travel agents booking a hellish group tour. This, interestingly, comes more than a year after Wirecard's insolvency from June 2020, which we now know was largely fabricated, and the newly appointed savior of America allegedly residing nowhere other than in Russia at the time.
My father operated as a pilot of fortunes for years... in exotic locations [like] running guns into Africa.
Roussev to Marsalek discussing Kabul airlifts for the CIA in August 2021 via Telegram
But wait – it gets richer.
The Uncles – Marsalek’s Shadow US State Department
Rewind to 2018. The FT discovers emails between Marsalek and a ProtonMail collective called “The Uncles”, the FT gets an anonymous tip:
“Check Marsalek’s emails with ‘The Uncles’”. What do they find ? A ProtonMail gang of ex-CIA warlords, retired US ambassadors, and US intelligence brass advising Marsalek on relocating Austria’s embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Yes, Jerusalem. Baruch ata Adonai.
One of them is a very senior former CIA officer, somebody who oversaw active operations in a certain theater of war. Another is a former US ambassador. We're talking here about people who are basically ex US military, ex US intelligence, all talking together online and calling themselves as a group 'The Uncles'.
Sam Jones with editor Paul Murphy in the Financial Times podcast
'Hot Money', Episode 8, 'Matryoshkas'
Marsalek’s pitch clearly stir-shakes spy-novel Martini suave:
“Gentlemen, our mutual friend speaks highly of you. Might you establish informal channels to probe the U.S. position ? Perhaps shape Austria’s domestic debate? Navigate the ... geopolitical complexities ?”
Gentlemen, it is a great pleasure meeting you...Thank you for introducing us, and your kind introductory words. You might be able to help us establish an informal channel to explore the United States position on [moving Austria’s embassy to Jerusalem]... and shape domestic dialogue in Austria.
Wirecard fugitive COO Jan Marsalek in email conversations with a group called 'The Uncles' in 2018
The FT’s “oopsie” moment
The FT’s response when they first stepped on these spicy emails from 2018 ? Quote:
“The emails ... seemed tangential at the time. We were busy!” They shelved it. Forgot. Moved on. A nothing burger.
Fast-forward to the year 2025. Sam Jones, FT’s podcast maestro, connects the dots after a whopping 7 years or so:
“Hang on... The Uncles... CIA links... Was this a network ?” Podcast listener: Yes. A fugitive ex Wirecard COO was running backchannel diplomacy for US ex-spooks while his UK auditors highly allegedly just napped.
The thing is, we didn't know what to make of this at the time. No, it was just so weird, because we got other stuff on our plate and this is so tangential to what we're doing. And then 7 years later, the messages about this airlift in Kabul came to light. I began to wonder whether there was some kind of network here after all. A group with links to the CIA that Marsalek had somehow found his way into.
Sam Jones' FT podcast
'Hot Money', Episode 8, "Matryoshkas"
The hypocrisy hammer
While the FT sermonizes on “rule-based orders”, Marsalek – a man whose LinkedIn might read "CIA Rogue Fixer | Embassy Relocator | Blockchain Wizzard" – was Langley’s go-to fixer. Yep. Julian Assange rots in prison for exposing their secrets; Marsalek gets hired by them. Munich’s courts dissect Wirecard’s staged insolvency literally without a single FT reporter present. But London ? Oh, they’ll drag Munich’s truth-seekers over coals.
The punchline ?
The Uncles are real. Marsalek’s free. And the FT ? Just realized they left a Cold War sequel in their drafts folder.
Do you know anyone who’s a bit rogue ?
Jan Marsalek, probably texting his florist, his forger, and the CIA in a group chat titled “Business Ventures“ 😇
Listen to the FT play catch-up yourself, they even have subtitles (click 'CC' below the video):
Hot Money: MatryoSharks (starting minute 23:27 +)
Leave a comment:
Send
This article was created and written entirely by Martin Dorsch, an accredited and independent, investigative journalist from Europe. He holds an MBA from a US University and a Bachelor Degree in Information Systems and had worked early in his career as a consultant in the US and EU. He does not work for, does not consult, does not own shares in or receives funding from any corporation or organisation that would benefit from this article so far.