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Yellow Pages Fri Apr 04 2025 13:14:47 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time).

 

Freedom quote for 4/4/2025
Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
(William Pitt the Elder)

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Were UK Special Forces planting bombs in Basra?


Suspicions strengthened by earlier reports

By Michael Keefer

"Does anyone remember the shock with which the British public greeted the revelation four years ago that one of the members of the Real IRA unit whose bombing attack in Omagh on August 15, 1998 killed twenty-nine civilians had been a double agent, a British army soldier?

"That soldier was not Britain’s only terrorist double agent. A second British soldier planted within the IRA claimed he had given forty-eight hours advance notice of the Omagh car-bomb attack to his handlers within the Royal Ulster Constabulary, including 'details of one of the bombing team and the man’s car registration.' Although the agent had made an audio tape of his tip-off call, Sir Ronnie Flanagan, chief constable of the RUC, declared that 'no such information was received' (Link).

"This second double agent went public in June 2002 with the claim that from 1981 to 1994, while on full British army pay, he had worked for 'the Force Research Unit, an ultra-secret wing of British military intelligence,' as an IRA mole. With the full knowledge and consent of his FRU and MI5 handlers, he became a bombing specialist who 'mixed explosive and … helped to develop new types of bombs,' including 'light-sensitive bombs, activated by photographic flashes, to overcome the problem of IRA remote-control devices having their signal jammed by army radio units.' He went on to become "a member of the Provisional IRA’s "internal security squad"—also known as the "torture unit"—which interrogated and executed suspected informers' (Link).

"The much-feared commander of that same 'torture unit' was likewise a mole, who had previously served in the Royal Marines’ Special Boat Squadron (an elite special forces unit, the Marines’ equivalent to the better-known SAS). A fourth mole, a soldier code-named 'Stakeknife' whose military handlers 'allowed him to carry out large numbers of terrorist murders in order to protect his cover within the IRA,' was still active in December 2002 as 'one of Belfast’s leading Provisionals' (Link).

"Reliable evidence also emerged in late 2002 that the British army had been using its double agents in terrorist organizations 'to carry out proxy assassinations for the British state'—most notoriously in the case of Belfast solicitor and human rights activist Pat Finucane, who was murdered in 1989 by the Protestant Ulster Defence Association. It appears that the FRU passed on details about Finucane to a British soldier who had infiltrated the UDA; he in turn "supplied UDA murder teams with the information" (Link).

"Recent events in Basra have raised suspicions that the British army may have reactivated these same tactics in Iraq.

"Articles published by Michel Chossudovsky, Larry Chin and Mike Whitney at the Centre for Research on Globalization’s website on September 20, 2005 have offered preliminary assessments of the claims of Iraqi authorities that two British soldiers in civilian clothes who were arrested by Iraqi police in Basra on September 19—and in short order released by a British tank and helicopter assault on the prison where they were being held—had been engaged in planting bombs in the city

"See: Link :: Link :: Link

"A further article by Kurt Nimmo points to false-flag operations carried out by British special forces troops in Northern Ireland and elsewhere, and to Donald Rumsfeld’s formation of the P2OG, or Proactive Preemptive Operations Group, as directly relevant to Iraqi charges of possible false-flag terror operations by the occupying powers in Iraq (Link).

"These accusations by Iraqi officials echo insistent but unsubstantiated claims, going back at least to the spring of 2004, to the effect that many of the terror bombings carried out against civilian targets in Iraq have actually been perpetrated by U.S. and British forces rather than by Iraqi insurgents.

"Some such claims can be briskly dismissed. In mid-May 2005, for example, a group calling itself 'Al Qaeda in Iraq' accused U.S. troops 'of detonating car bombs and falsely accusing militants' (Link). For even the most credulous, this could at best be a case of the pot calling the kettle soot-stained. But it’s not clear why anyone would want to believe this claim, coming as it does from a group or groupuscule purportedly led by the wholly mythical al-Zarqawi—and one whose very name affiliates it with terror bombers. These people, if they exist, might themselves have good reason to blame their own crimes on others ..."
Centre for Research on Globalization

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Zelloo said...

I'm not sure this is true...Can any one validate pls..

4:19 am  

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