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British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

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British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby yialousa1971 » Sun Dec 16, 2012 1:46 pm

British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria
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This story connects far-flung places. Kenya, Malaya, Northern Ireland and now Syria. The one over-arching theme is British counter-insurgency strategy, or more plainly, the use of state terrorism by British forces to achieve political objectives.


The story came alive again this week with two seemingly unrelated news developments. First, we learn of deeper involvement of Britain’s military in the violence raging across Syria. British military officers and Special Forces are reportedly training - in Jordanian territory - foreign-backed militants to step up their campaign of terrorism across Syria.

These terror gangs, whom the Western mainstream media call “freedom fighters”, have been plunging Syria into bloody chaos for the past 22 months, with car bombs ripping through civilian neighbourhoods and death squads massacring whole villages, the latest being Aqrab in Hama Province where over 125 people where murdered this week. Ample evidence shows that the mercenaries, recruited from various countries including Libya, Saudi Arabia and Iraq, are covertly supplied with weapons and training from the US, Britain and France via the conduits of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey.

The surge in violence and killing of civilians, with a notable agenda of inciting sectarian war, is proof that the British expertise in fomenting terror is paying dividends for the Western imperialist objective of destabilizing Syrian society and the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

The second development this week was the publication of an official British report into the murder 23 years ago of Belfast lawyer Pat Finucane. The two issues, Syrian violence and the killing of Mr Finucane, are intimately related - although the British government and its media have done their best to bury any connection.

Let’s unravel the layers of obfuscation.

When the review of Mr Finucane’s murder by Sir Desmond de Silva QC was published this week, British Prime Minister David Cameron offered an apology to the family of the Belfast man. “I am deeply sorry,” said Cameron in the British House of Commons, and he went on to acknowledge that the killing pointed to “shocking levels of collusion” between British security forces and loyalist death squads. The latter were paramilitaries recruited from Northern Ireland’s pro-British civilian population that perpetrated many heinous murders during the conflict in that territory between 1969-1994.

However, the widow of Mr Finucane and their children denounced the latest review as a “white wash”. Geraldine Finucane has good reason to dismiss the report because it portrays the murder of her husband as a rogue act of violence. Cameron added to the white wash by saying that the case represented a “failing” by the British military forces to prevent the murder.

This is typical official British deception. For what the murder of Pat Finucane reveals is not a failure, but rather a successful deployment of Britain’s policy of state terrorism - a policy that involved the systematic collusion between British military intelligence and loyalist death squads. This practice was and is a central part of British counter-insurgency tactics - a policy that was overseen from the highest office of British government in Downing Street.

Much of Britain’s “dirty war” strategy, as an institutional practice, can be attributed to one of its most decorated military commanders - General Sir Frank Kitson.

Kitson published his war manual - Low Intensity Operations - in 1971. It has since become a standard text for British military counter-insurgency techniques, or as we have noted, state terrorism.

Kitson developed his techniques from his involvement in suppressing popular uprisings in the British colonies of Kenya during the Mau-Mau rebellion (1953-55) and in Malaya (1957) against a communist
insurgency there.

In 1970, the then Brigadier was dispatched to Northern Ireland, which itself was on the cusp of a renewed Irish republican struggle against British rule in that province of the United Kingdom. One of Kitson’s innovations was the recruitment of what he called “counter gangs”. For his endeavours and “meritrocious service”, he was later knighted by the British Queen, later going on to serve as her aide-de-camp and elevated to Commander-in-Chief of UK land forces from 1982-1985.


The callous objective devised by Kitson was to use British proxy death squads to sow as much terror and mayhem as possible in order to destroy popular insurgency. This was the beginning of Britain’s policy of collusion in Northern Ireland, which operated for nearly three decades and claimed hundreds of lives. From the British government point of view, one great advantage of this policy was to provide “plausible denial” to the authorities for the state terrorism that they were unleashing. This advantage still pertains to this day, as can be seen from the latest review into Pat Finucane’s murder and the hollow apology from David Cameron “for shocking levels of collusion”.


There is little doubt that the British state at the highest level ordered Mr Finucane’s assassination. During the 1980s, he was a formidable young lawyer, successfully defending dozens of individuals who had fallen foul to the British system of repression and corruption of the legal process. Finucane was a thorn in the side of the British establishment, exposing its vicious policies of criminalising republican political opponents.

On 17 January 1989, British cabinet minister Douglas Hogg addressed the House of Commons and denounced what he called “solicitors who are unduly sympathetic to the IRA [Irish Republican Army]”. Hogg later said that he had been briefed by “people who knew” - meaning British intelligence. On that fateful day, Hogg effectively signed Pat Finucane’s death warrant.

Less than a month later, on 12 February 1989, a loyalist death squad sledgehammered its way into the Finucane home in Belfast while the family was having Sunday dinner. In front of his wife and three children, the gunmen shot Pat Finucane 12 times in the head as he lay prone on the floor of the kitchen, his terrified children huddled under the dining table as shot after shot rang out.

After 23 years of the family’s courageous campaigning for justice, David Cameron admitted this week that the murder was carried out by loyalists in collusion with British intelligence, which had provided the killers with target details and helped in their escape on the day of the killing.

But this appalling murder is but the tip of a sordid iceberg that reveals systematic state terrorism by the British government and its military over decades in Northern Ireland.

A year before Pat Finucane’s murder, British military intelligence oversaw the smuggling of hundreds of high-powered weapons from South Africa to their loyalist paramilitary operatives in Northern Ireland.

The consignment included AK47 assault rifles, Browning semi-automatic pistols and fragmentation grenades.

In a seminal investigative study by Belfast-based civilian campaign group, Relatives For Justice, titled Collusion: 1990-1994, it was found that this supply of firepower by British intelligence to loyalist death squads resulted in a dramatic escalation of murders by these same gangs. Based on forensic and ballistics data, the weapons from South Africa were used in as many as 300 murders by loyalist death squads - nearly 10 per cent of the total death toll during the entire conflict. Some of the victims of state-sanctioned murder were republican activists, but many more were just ordinary civilians.

The murder of Pat Finucane is just one out of hundreds of killings in Northern Ireland that the British authorities perpetrated in their policy of collusion with death squads. It is a policy that grew out of its terror campaigns in East Africa and Asia and which was “optimized” in Northern Ireland. The political objective was to terrorise the population in the North of Ireland into accepting a “peace process” during the 1990s that falls way short of the legitimate claim to national self-determination and independence of a united Ireland.

Unfortunately, it may be seen as having been a partial British success given that Northern Ireland still remains a sectarian territory under British jurisdiction - despite the aspirations of the majority of Irish people across the entire island.


In Syria, of course, the political conditions are different. There, the majority of Syrian people support the government in Damascus and are opposed to foreign interference. The so-called uprising that the Western governments and their servile propaganda news media trumpet is nothing but a foreign covert criminal war of aggression fuelled by foreign weaponry and mercenaries.


Nevertheless, one can still discern the malevolent hand of British state terrorist expertise: the training, weapons, intelligence and logistics. Moreover, the use of terror gangs to inflict mayhem and sectarian bloodletting is straight out of the British military manual, as devised by General Sir Frank Kitson.

As car bombs tear through the bodies of Syrian schoolchildren and as loved ones end up in side-street gutters with bullets in the head - this is classic British policy of using terroristic means to achieve nefarious political ends: in this case, the dismemberment of Syrian society and the implementation of regime change.

FC/JR

Originally from Belfast, Ireland, Finian Cunningham (born 1963) is a prominent expert in international affairs. The author and media commentator was expelled from Bahrain in June 2011 for his critical journalism in which he highlighted human rights violations by the Western-backed regime. He is a Master’s graduate in Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a scientific editor for the Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a career in journalism. He is also a musician and songwriter. For many years, he worked as an editor and writer in the mainstream news media, including The Mirror, Irish Times and Independent. He is now based in East Africa where he is writing a book on Bahrain and the Arab Spring.He co-hosts a weekly current affairs programme, Sunday at 3pm GMT on Bandung Radio. More Press TV articles by Finian Cunningham.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/12/14 ... -to-syria/

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Siusaidh

Dec 15, 2012 9:0 PM

As an historian and an Irish descendant, I very much appreciate Finian Cunningham's revelations about the struggle in Northern Ireland. The original conquest of Ireland was a model for colonization elsewhere. British 'counter-insurgency' in the North tells us much about tactics elsewhere. Thanks for connecting the dots forming such a murderous picture of the world we live in and the lies we are told about it.

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DT

Dec 15, 2012 5:25 PM

These raw, bare-bones, honest articles should be read to schoolchildren as part of their History curriculum in schools.

Click to Rate ReplyRating4


christina

Dec 15, 2012 4:50 AM

excellent artical finian. thankyou.

Click to Rate ReplyRating8


hm

Dec 14, 2012 8:44 PM

Just people of the world may rename united kingdom as ‘uncivilized english empire’ due to its management of committing open and hidden crimes against humanity.

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Irish Sean

Dec 14, 2012 6:43 PM

Excellent article again Finian. With regards to the murder of Pat Finucane, 4 men were directly involved.Brian Nelson supplied the intelligence, Tommy "Tucker" Lyttle ordered the killing, William Stobie provided the guns and Ken Barrett carried out the killing.All 4 were british agents for either Military intelligence, or the RUC Special Branch.

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Finian Cunninghamin reply to Irish Sean

12/15/2012 6:18:03 PM

Thanks Sean for the extra information. We should add a fifth person: British Colonel Gordon Kerr who was head of the British Force Research Unit that handled these killers and many other operatives during the dirty war in N Ireland.

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aaron gold

Dec 14, 2012 6:35 PM

WHY DOESN'T RUSSIA STOP THIS MURDER?There is no doubt that Russia is the only power that can withstand british imperialism. America is totally dominated by british Royal polictics and banking frauds. If Russia had brains they would realize that the next target is Moscow. Soon after The brits destroy Syria they will have a super highway right to St petersberg. If i were Putin i would immediately send in Russian paratroopers to shoreup the Syrin firewall between british aggression and russia.
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby supporttheunderdog » Sun Dec 16, 2012 4:42 pm

I would not trust that mouthpiece of Moslem extremism PressTv one Iota_
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby kurupetos » Sun Dec 16, 2012 10:44 pm

supporttheunderdog wrote:I would not trust that mouthpiece of Moslem extremism PressTv one Iota_

:lol: No doubt. You are trained to trust only pro-Zionist propaganda, like BBC. :roll:
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby Get Real! » Sun Dec 16, 2012 11:18 pm

By the same token… if Greeks feel that “Alexander the great” was their man, then they have much (terrorism) to answer for from Europe to India!
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby GreekIslandGirl » Sun Dec 16, 2012 11:50 pm

Alexander the Great set about defending Greece from widespread Persian terrorism. He did not attack first!
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby Get Real! » Mon Dec 17, 2012 1:08 am

GreekIslandGirl wrote:Alexander the Great set about defending Greece from widespread Persian terrorism. He did not attack first!

He was in India defending Greece? :? He must've lost his way! :lol:
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby kurupetos » Mon Dec 17, 2012 1:55 am

Get Real! wrote:
GreekIslandGirl wrote:Alexander the Great set about defending Greece from widespread Persian terrorism. He did not attack first!

He was in India defending Greece? :? He must've lost his way! :lol:

Best form of defence is attack. 8)
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby yialousa1971 » Mon Dec 17, 2012 3:46 am

British state employees 'facilitated' murder of Pat Finucane - Review

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A review into the murder of Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane in 1989 has found that actions by employees of the British state "actively facilitated" the killing.

Mr Finucane was shot dead by loyalists in front of his wife and children in February 1989.

The report by Desmond de Silva concluded that there was no "adequate framework" for the police and security forces running agents in loyalist and republican gangs.

Mr de Silva said people whom the RUC Special Branch viewed as "thorns in the side" were not warned when threats were made against them.

He said the officers decided whether to inform people a threat had been made against them, only if a link could not be established to paramilitaries.

In his report, he highlighted one case involving another solicitor, Oliver Kelly, whom the RUC believed had links to paramilitaries.

"It was clear to me that steps were often not taken to secure the protection of those who were considered to be (as referred to in one intelligence document) 'a thorn in the side' of the security forces during this period of the Troubles."

It found that the British army and Special Branch had advance notice of a series of planned UDA assassinations, but nothing was done.

Mr de Silva found that employees of the state and stage agents played "key roles" in Mr Finucane’s murder.

Senior officers from the RUC, MI5 and the military repeatedly raised this issue without anything being done for years.

Mr de Silva said successive governments knew this was the case, but did nothing about it.

The lack of guidelines was "significant", he said, as the offices did not know the extent "to which their agents could be permitted to engage in criminality in order to gather intelligence".

He said intelligence officers were being asked to do work that could not be "achieved effectively" in ways that were lawful.

"It is my view that those charged with upholding the law should never be put in the position of potentially having to break the law in order to discharge their official duties," Mr de Silva concluded.

Mr de Silva said "agents of the state were involved in carrying out serious violations of human rights up to and including murder".

He wrote that while there was no "over-arching state conspiracy to murder Patrick Finucane," there was collusion in his killing in terms of the passage of information from members of the security forces to the UDA, the failure to act on threat intelligence, the participation of state agents in the murder and the subsequent failure to investigate and arrest key members of the West Belfast UDA.

Mr de Silva said that each aspect of collusion can be explained by what he describes as "the wider thematic issues which I have examined as part of this review".

The publication of a report provides "the fullest possible account of the murder of Mr Finucane and the extent of state collusion", British Prime Minister David Cameron said.

He added: "It cannot be argued that these were rogue agents."

He said the degree of collusion exposed was "unacceptable" and said in a message to the family: "I am deeply sorry."

The Finucane family said "the dirt has been swept under the carpet" and described today's report as a sham and a whitewash.

In November 2011, Mr Cameron announced he was tasking Mr de Silva to examine the papers in what was one of the most controversial killings of the Troubles.

Last Sunday, RTÉ News published details of a 2003 inquiry which showed the RUC had recovered the murder weapon and gave it back to the British army to facilitate its destruction.

http://www.rte.ie/news/2012/1212/pat-fi ... eview.html
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby yialousa1971 » Mon Dec 17, 2012 3:50 am

Curious case of Pat Finucane’s murder

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A report into the 1989 murder of Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane was released today. Mr. Finucane, a Roman Catholic, was murdered in front of his family and it was long suspected that elements in the secrutiy services had colluded in his assassination. He had been a prominent solicitor in Belfast representing numerous IRA clinets. Today's report reveals a high degree of state collusion into the murder but concluded that there was no evidence of any state conspiracy. Prime Minister David Cameron presented the report's findings to the House of Commons earlier today.


Mr. Speaker, the murder of Patrick Finucane in his home in North Belfast on Sunday 12th February 1989 was an appalling crime. He was shot 14 times as he sat down for dinner with his wife and three children. He died in front of them. His wife, Geraldine, was injured too.

The tone of Mr. Cameron’s speech was clear – respectful, sympathetic and direct. The report conducted by Sir Desmond de Silva, QC, revealed that aides of the state had been involved in Mr. Finucane’s murder. MI5 spread propaganda about Mr. Finucane in the years leading up to his killing and the Royal Ulster Constabulary proposed that he should be killed. He passed information to his killers. They failed to stop the attack and they helped cover up what actually happened. But Mr. Cameron’s crucial point was that British government bore no responsibility for what happened.

Sir Desmond is satisfied that there was not “an over-arching State conspiracy to murder Patrick Finucane”.

Mr. Cameron expressed concern for Finucane family. The family aren’t buying it. Michael Finucane was boy when he saw his father being murdered before him.

I think the extent to which it was known by various media agencies that my father’s life was in danger and indeed no warning was passed to him. The report says that it’s not clear whether passing on the information would have changed the outcome, but I think that it’s a very simplistic conclusion to reach, like many other conclusions in the report.

The idea that the government had no responsibility has aroused skepticism. Mr. Dorothy, a long-term observer of the troubles had this to say,

I think David Cameron presented himself as not as decent bloke.

Mr. Cameron did extensively conceal the role played by the people, such as military intelligence agent, Brian Nelson who has been ordered to make killers more professional. He provided the killer with the photograph of Mr. Funicane and pointed out where he lived.

Indeed Sir Desmond concludes that army informer Brian Nelson should “properly be considered to be acting in a position equivalent to an employee of the MoD.” And although Nelson is found to have withheld information from his Army handlers “…the Army must bear a degree of responsibility for Nelson’s targeting activity during 1987-89, including that of Patrick Finucane.”

But as Mr. Dorothy from Queens University asks, if there was no knowledge on what was being done on behalf of the government by government agency in Northern Ireland, then it’s just a degree of attitude on the part of the British government.

You can’t have it both ways, either these people were criminals carrying out murders on the streets of Belfast on their own initiative and then they are criminals and should be charged – or they were acting on behalf of government policy.

Funicanes have called for a full public inquiry. They believe it will happen.

The opposition have made it clear that they will establish public inquiry to resolve the issue. It’s taken a long time to get to this point. We’re very much used to the fact that these things do not move quickly. So we’re prepared to continue our campaign. Hopefully, one of them will live up to responsibility.

So far it doesn’t look as if Mr. Cameron is going to yield any time soon.
http://english.ruvr.ru/2012_12_13/Curio ... -s-murder/
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Re: British state terrorism from Northern Ireland to Syria

Postby supporttheunderdog » Mon Dec 17, 2012 6:55 pm

RT, another state controlled proaganda outfit. Russian State Terrorism puts everyone else in the shade: when are going to see similar from the Russian Authorities about Litvinenko, Stanislav Markelov, Anna Politkovskaya, , Nikolai Khokhlov, Roman Tsepov, Nikolai Khokhlov, Roman Tsepov, and the victims of the the 1999 Apartment bombings?
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