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 Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)

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AuteurMessage
HERVE




Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptyDim 7 Oct 2012 - 10:46


Un document intéressant :

http://www.fas.org/sgp/eprint/naftali.pdf


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HERVE




Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptySam 1 Déc 2012 - 15:08


Un document "historique" :


Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_110


disponible sur :

http://fr.scribd.com/BEGHINSELEN

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/115125028/Office-of-Special-Projects-Office-of-Policy-Coordination-1948

(une version plus lisible est dans la seconde moitié)

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Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

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MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptySam 1 Déc 2012 - 15:17


Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_210


Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_310


FECOM = Far East Command


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Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

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MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptySam 1 Déc 2012 - 15:29



Le document suivant (1951) :

Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_410

est disponible sur

http://fr.scribd.com/BEGHINSELEN

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/115126267/Responsibilities-of-CIA-OPC-With-Respect-to-Guerrilla-Warfare-1951


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Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

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MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptySam 1 Déc 2012 - 15:40



Historique de l'OPC et de la CIA ...


Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_1110
Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_1210
Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Opc_1310



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HERVE




Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

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MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptySam 1 Déc 2012 - 15:52


Un document de la CIA ( 1979 ) sur le MOSSAD :


Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Mossad10


est disponible sur

http://fr.scribd.com/BEGHINSELEN

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/115127383/Mossad-1979-CIA-Document

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HERVE




Nombre de messages : 21558
Date d'inscription : 08/12/2009

Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptyDim 2 Déc 2012 - 16:29


Pour information, le document suivant :

Drugs, Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy: Narcotics Traffickers and the Contras

Non-Classified, Report, Extract, December 1988, 28 pp.


Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 Contra10


est sur :

http://fr.scribd.com/BEGHINSELEN

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/115206834/Drugs-Law-Enforcement-and-Foreign-Policy-1988


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Nombre de messages : 21558
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MessageSujet: Re: Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie)   Stay-Behind (OTAN & CIA) / Gladio (Italie) - Page 11 EmptyMer 26 Déc 2012 - 21:09



Skeletons start emerging from closet - OPERATION GLADIO.

16 novembre 1990

The Independent - London

Operation Gladio was set up to go underground in the Cold War. Was it later used for dirty tricks against the Left? Charles Richards in Rome and Simon Jones in London report

From Charles Richards and Simon Jones in London

Despite repeated denials from Nato, evidence is emerging all over Europe that secret anti-communist networks similar to Gladio, established with the backing of the CIA and the British secret service after the Second World War, are still active or have only recently been disbanded. All are said to have operated with their governments' approval, but in some countries have been accused of carrying out right-wing terrorist attacks aimed at subverting left-wing parties.

The groups were trained in sabotage and guerrilla warfare, allegedly with Nato and CIA funding, to organise resistance behind enemy lines if Warsaw Pact forces invaded Western Europe. However, some are thought to have got out of control and operated independently.

Although several Nato countries have confirmed their existence, Nato's Secretary-General, Manfred Worner, has refused to comment, saying the alliance never made statements about military secrets. A former secretary-general, Joseph Luns, said he had never heard of a secret network, but admitted it might have been set up behind his back.

Earlier this week, Belgium's Defence Minister, Guy Coeme, said the Belgian arm of the network, SDRA-8, set up with British weapons in 1949, was still active under the head of the Belgian military's intelligence service. Mr Coeme said Nato was aware of its existence, although it was never part of the alliance and in recent years was only a communications network. Belgium is investigating a series of unsolved supermarket bombings in the 1980s, which are thought to have been carried out by right-wing terrorists, and local newspapers have suggested the SDRA-8 may have been involved.

Germany, too, has admitted its Gladio-like network still exists. A government spokesman described secret "precautions" agreed between Nato partners, but said these were under review after the end of the Cold War.

The French Defence Minister, Jean-Pierre Chevenement, said Glaive (Sword), the French network, had been dissolved by President Mitterrand, but did not say when. It had only been "dormant", Mr Chevenement said.

In Turkey, where the Communist Party is still illegal, the former prime minister, Bulent Ecevit, said "patriotic volunteers" staffed a US-funded unit that was ready to go into action in the event of a Communist takeover. The government has refused to say whether it has been disbanded.

Andreas Papandreou, Greece's former Socialist prime minister, said his government had disbanded the Greek network, which he described as a "para-state" organisation. Known as "Red Sheepskin", it was formed in 1955 as a secret part of the agreement to set up US military bases in Greece.

The Netherlands is still running its network, and there have been reports of similar operations in Denmark, Norway, Luxembourg, Spain and Portugal, as well as Sweden and Switzerland, which are neutral countries.

What remains unclear is how far any of the groups were allowed to operate independently, or to further the interests of elements within their governments. Although there is strong circumstantial evidence - at least in Italy - of links with terrorism, these remain unproven.

While the rest of Europe is opening up the networks to public scrutiny, the British Government has so far refused to answer questions on the affair. At the Defence Ministry, it seems the spirit of the Cold War dies hard. Yesterday a ministry spokeswoman would say only: "We do not comment on security matters."

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Codename Gladio - has this secret network become a front for terrorism and the far-right?

7 juin 1992

The Observer


A network of Secret agents who were to "stay behind" if the Red Army overran Western Europe.

By Hugh O'Shaughnessy.

The codename was Gladio and it was the most ambitious and secret operation in Western Europe since the Second World War. But now, with the Cold War over, it is ending on notes of pure farce.

The Belgian authorities have lost the code for getting in touch with their most secret agents, men who would have gone into action when the Soviet army swept into Flanders: they have no means of working it out again. One Belgian officer, Colonel Bernard Legrand, knows some of the names but he won't co-operate: it's confidential, he says. The British and the United States governments know how to break the code but won't tell the wretched Belgians.

At 10.15 on the morning of 31 January last year Colonel Jean Bodart of Belgian military intelligence landed in a Belgian air force plane at RAF Northolt. He collected 13 packages filled with cyphers and an old Remington typewriter from British intelligence and two hours later flew back to Brussels. The packages contained the names of the members of the Gladio network in Belgium. The Remington typewriter was part of the decoding equipment. But Belgian intelligence, whose skills at cryptography have sadly been allowed to get rusty, have wrestled in vain with the task of decyphering the names in the packages.

One day in 1984 a party of US Marines set out from an airport north of London. Highly trained men, each fluent in one Eastern European language, they parachuted to their secret rendezvous and were met by an agent, a local bank manager, who offered them guidance. They lived off the land for a fortnight, hiding from the local civilian population as they stalked towards their prey. Stealthily they approached their objective and opened fire, killing a warrant officer. One of the Marines lost an eye in the operation.

Their language skills were not much use: the objective was the police station in the sleepy southern Belgian town of Vielsalm and none of the Marines spoke French. If they had, they could have saved one man's life and another man's eye.

The object of the exercise had been twofold: to jolt the local Belgian police into a higher state of alert and, no less important, to give the impression to the population at large that the comfortable and well-fed Kingdom of Belgium was on the brink of red revolution. Guns used in the operation were later planted by a shadowy Belgian intelligence outfit in the Brussels squat used by a Communist splinter group.

On such notes of opera buffa is Gladio being wound up. Mercifully for the reputations of all concerned perhaps, the farce is overlaying memories of large-scale incursions into terrorism and crime which transformed a clever plan to defend Western democracy into a scheme which, according to startling new evidence unearthed by Observer researchers in many countries, struck at the very roots of Western values of freedom and the rule of law.

Starting as an unexceptionable piece of forward planning, it moved on to unauthorised political surveillance and then, fatally, to the mounting of a series of outrages with the far Right which cost the lives of hundreds of innocent Europeans. The dead include at least one Western European leader, Aldo Moro of Italy. Much still remains to be investigated, particularly about Gladio's operations in Franco's Spain.

The strategy behind Gladio when it was set up in the late 1940s was impeccable. As Stalin consolidated his political and military power in Eastern Europe and promoted his version of totalitarianism where he could, the Western allies came together to prevent any recurrence of the debacles at the beginning of the Second World War when democracies were knocked over like ninepins by the Wehrmacht.

In 1939 and 1940 the German army had been able to overrun its European neighbours with supreme ease. Polish cavalry was no match for German tanks, the Dutch surrendered after Rotterdam had been destroyed from the air, Paris was taken without difficulty, scarcely a shot was fired as the Nazis conquered Denmark. The Channel Islands, the only British soil Hitler conquered, had already been deemed indefensible.

As the swastika flew everywhere in Europe, from Brittany to the Russian steppes, it was only with the greatest difficulty and sacrifice that resistance movements were established from Britain which were eventually to be capable of harrying and sabotaging the German army of occupation and finally to collaborate with the Allied forces of liberation.

Such a lack of foresight, it was agreed in Western capitals, was never to be permitted again in the face of Stalin's threat, particularly after the Communist putsch in Prague in 1948. Under the aegis of Britain and the US, a secret network of recruits was to be set up all over the continent. They were to be provided with caches of radios, money and weapons.

If the Red Army did overrun Western Europe and Western armies were defeated and forced to flee, there would be someone left with intimate local knowledge who could receive orders from abroad, send out information and go into action against the Soviet occupation forces. They were not to be so many Captain Mainwarings, openly organised in Dad's Army outfits around the local drill hall, who could be easily rounded up by the Russians. Their role was to be serious and totally clandestine. They were to be known as `stay-behinds'.

This continent-wide operation, which became known as Gladio, also had the task of keeping an eye on what were considered domestic threats to Western democracies by agents of the Soviet Union. In the post-war years when Moscow-line Communist parties were strong, particularly in France and Italy, that task was challenging. It was to lead to particular abuses.

Although the networks were initially set up at the initiative of democratically elected national leaders, they soon took on an independent life of their own so that even commanders-in-chief, defence ministers, prime ministers and presidents were unaware of what they were doing.

The network and their caches were to remain ultra-secret until 1990. General Bernard Rogers, the former US commander of Nato, for instance, says he was unaware of the details. `The organisation of any stay-behinds must have been at the national level and not at the Nato level,' he comments.

The lid was lifted a little in November 1990 by the Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti, who had strongly denied the existence of Gladio for well over a decade. In a statement to parliament in Rome, Andreotti became the first major politician to talk publicly of the project.

It all started at the end of the last war. On 27 January 1949 Sir Stewart Menzies, head of MI6, set out the grand strategy in a top secret and personal letter to Paul-Henri Spaak, the Belgian Socialist Prime Minister who was later to become secretary-general of Nato. As the idea took shape, Sir Stewart wrote of Anglo-Belgian collaboration in particular:

The present object of this collaboration should be directed to two main aims:

a. The improvement of our information on the subject of Cominform and potential enemy activities in so far as they concern our two countries.

b. The preparation of appropriate intelligence and action organisations in the event of war.

At the same time the letter, a copy of which is in The Observer's possession, throws light on what became an increasingly important factor in the Gladio operation the rivalry between the British and the Americans.

Menzies continued:

I have always regarded American participation in the defence of Western Europe as a matter of capital importance. I am, however, convinced that all effort, American not excluded, must be integrated into an harmonious whole. Should, therefore, the Americans wish to pursue with your Service certain preparations to meet the needs of war, I regard it as essential and I understand that I have your agreement that these activities should be co-ordinated with my own. Such co-ordination, moreover, will prevent undesirable repercussions with the Western Union Chiefs of Staff. I have already indicated to the Head of the American Service that I am ready to work out plans for detailed co-operation with him on this basis, and I therefore suggest that any projects formulated by them should be referred back to Washington for subsequent discussion between the British and American Services in London.

The correspondence should, Menzies suggested, be regarded as `highly secret'.

Early the following month Spaak wrote back to Menzies agreeing with his ideas but begging Britain and the US to get their act together.

I agree with you that it would be highly desirable that the three services (British, American and Belgian) should collaborate closely. If two of them, the American and the British, refuse that collaboration, the situation of the Belgian service would be extremely delicate and difficult.

Thus I feel it is indispensable that at the highest level there should be negotiations to settle this question ...

In the event both powers helped to pay for the Gladio operations in Belgium. Senator Roger Lallemand, head of the parliamentary inquiry into Gladio set up in Belgium after Andreotti's revelations, recalls: `What was striking about the Belgian stay-behinds was that the financing at the beginning was in part undertaken by the British and the Americans. We were able to note that the Belgian stay-behinds had received gold coins ... The sums were quite large and in fact were stored away since they couldn't have been used.'

As the years went by, the stay-behind network, which ended up as a semi-detached operation of Nato, extended across Europe, the British taking the lead in Belgium, the Netherlands, Scandinavia and the Iberian peninsula, the Americans elsewhere. The fact that various powers involved were not members of Nato such as Switzerland did not hinder Gladio being extended to their territory. The names of all the stay-behinds were lodged for safe-keeping in London and Boston, Massachusetts.

The extreme secrecy and lack of supervision of the Gladio networks by elected governments meant that time and again they were to fall victim to right-wing extremists inside and outside the Western security services, who set their own political agendas and acted on them.

The way down that slippery slope was typified by the attitude of James Jesus Angleton, the CIA's chief of counter-intelligence. According to his biographer Tom Mangold, Angleton was convinced that Harold Wilson and Willy Brandt were Moscow agents. His black list of pro-Communists also included Henry Kissinger, the Canadian Prime Minister Lester Pearson and Averell Harriman, a former US Ambassador in Moscow and Governor of New York.

A US military field manual published for the guidance of its officers stated: `There may be times when host-country governments fall into passivity or indecision in face of Communist or Communist-inspired subversion and react with inadequate vigor to intelligence estimates transmitted by US agencies ... In such cases US army intelligence must have the means of launching special operations which will convince host-country governments and public opinion of the reality of insurgent action and assess the counter-action.'

Although doubt has been cast on the authenticity of the text, Ray Cline, a former deputy director of the CIA who joined US intelligence as a young man during the Second World War, has no doubt it is genuine.

In Belgium, for instance, all evidence points to the fact that a US-born Gladio agent, Wood Gardiner, infiltrated the Belgian pacifist movement and persuaded some of its members in 1984 to steal shells from the missile base at Florenne. When the theft was discovered it did the pacifist cause no good at all.

More important were the apparently random shootings in Belgian supermarkets which ended with a particularly nasty incident in 1983 in the town of Aalst, a few miles from Brussels, which became known as the Brabant-Walloon massacres. Senator Lallemand has linked the killings to `the work of foreign governments or of intelligence services working for foreigners, a terrorism aimed at destablising democratic society'.

Martial Lekeu, a former member of the Belgian gendarmerie who was close to the investigation of the atrocities, that members of his own force were involved in the murders and that offical inquiries into it were aborted.

The British authorities, leaders with Washington in the scheme, are refusing all comment on Gladio. But information about Britain's role has come from parliamentary and other investigations carried out elsewhere in Europe.

Belgian documents, starting with Spaak's letter of 1949, show what a major role Britain has constantly played. Papers presented to the parliamentary inquiry set up in Belgium on Gladio show that in Belgium in 1981 and in Britain in 1982 Belgian personnel received training from British instructors. In April 1982 Belgians prepared for a Gladio exercise involving Britain and the US, codenamed Blackbird, which was called off at the last minute when Argentina invaded the Falklands.

In 1990 Colonel S. Schwebach of Belgian intelligence reported to his Defence Minister that an exercise called Waterland had taken place the previous year. In it, members of the Royal Marines Special Boat Squadron parachuted into the sea off the coast of Flanders, were guided ashore by Belgian civilians and went on to simulate the dynamiting of the massive canal locks at Zeebrugge.

There were even reports, so far unconfirmed, in Belgium that Belgian personnel had been part of a recent Gladio exercise in Britain aimed at demonstrating that Dover docks could be put out of action were the Russians to occupy Kent.

Britain was active too in the Gladio operation in Switzerland. Effrem Cattalan, who headed the Swiss P26 intelligence organisation and helped to organise Gladio in his country, told us how his organisation `has English colleagues who instructed them in general training, like covert operations and parachute jumps at night in which England has had exceptionally good experience since the war'.

The British also collaborated, he said, with his predecessor at P26, Colonel Albert Bachmann, for the possible evacuation of the headquarters of a Swiss resistence movement to Britain, known as Operation Edelweiss. The report of the Swiss official investigation into the Gladio affair, led by Judge Pierre Cornu and published last September, shows that, with admirable meticulousness, a supply of Swiss army buttons and other insignia was lodged, against the day they might come in useful, in the safe of the Swiss embassy in Bryanston Square.

Discussions, the Swiss inquiry revealed, had also taken place between 1976 and 1979 about the evacuation of a Swiss government-in-exile to Ireland if the Russians had come over the Alps.

Unlike the Nato countries, Cattalan claimed, the Swiss banned British or other foreign military personnel from taking part in exercises on Swiss soil. According to the Swiss report, however, such exercises did take place, some codenamed Targum, probably annually between 1973 and 1979, certainly from 1982 to 1988. Others, called Cravat and Susanne, were held in 1976, 1978, 1983, 1986 and 1988.

The report frankly confesses that such were the links between the Swiss and the British officials and agents who dealt with the Gladio scheme that British intelligence knew more about Swiss plans than the Swiss government and high command.

No detail was too small for the Swiss judges. Their report expressed concern, for instance, that the issuing by Swiss officials of false documents to Swiss agents of Gladio who went abroad infringed federal law. It went on to point out that one Swiss Gladio agent who had used his false identity card to obtain a fishing licence in Britain had contravened Article Six of the Swiss penal code, which covers the punishment in Switzerland of crimes committed by Swiss abroad.

Meanwhile, at least one British family still mourns a victim of the darkest chapter of Gladio, a series of bombings a decade ago which were at first attributed to the Red Brigades.

The largest, at Bologna railway station on 2 August 1980, claimed 86 lives. Harry Mitchell, a civil servant, and his wife Shirley, of Bloomfield Road, Bath, lost their daughter Catherine, who was 21. She died in the blast with her 22 year old fiance John Kolpinski, from Bristol. Her body was so disfigured that it was identified only by the Miss Selfridge label on her blouse.

This explosion was part of a series of atrocities which left at least 300 dead as bombs went off in the Piazza Fontana in Milan, on trains at Brescia and on the Naples-Milan express in a tunnel south of Bologna. The Mitchells are outraged that Britain is refusing to extradite back to Italy one of those sought for questioning in Italy about the crime, Roberto Fiore.

Fiore, now 33, has lived freely here in Pimlico since 1980, running a prosperous accomodation agency and mixing in extreme right, anti-semitic circles. There is a strong suspicion that MI6 is grateful for information Fiore was able to give them about Lebanon, where he learnt some of his terrorist techniques, and is blocking efforts to question him.

The Mitchells got no satisfaction when they wrote about the Fiore affair to Mrs Thatcher in Downing Street in June 1985. But the other day they were been brought up to date on British government thinking. On 29 March, Mayhew, then Attorney-General, explained in a letter to the Mitchells' MP, Chris Patten, how British justice could do nothing about sending Fiore back.

The Italian railway bombings were blamed on the extreme Left as part of a strategy to convince voters that the country was in a state of tension and that they had no alternative to voting the safe Christian Democrat ticket. All clues point to the fact that they were masterminded from within Gladio.

Francesco Cossiga, who stepped down from the presidency of Italy in April, helped to organise Gladio when he was Interior Minister. He recalls how Britain and the US collaborated in setting up the network in Italy in 1951, `concerned with what might happen to Europe if it were invaded'.

He traces the official formalities at the inauguration of Gladio by the principal figures of the Atlantic Alliance. At the instigation of the Supreme Commander Allied Forces Europe, the first statute of the clandestine planning committee to oversee Gladio was approved.

`It was agreed that three countries, the US, France and Britain, would be permanent members and the rest would be associate members that meant Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Greece and Turkey. Italy was invited to become an associate member. Italy turned down this invitation and instead asked to become a permanent member, but did not get an answer at the time. In 1956 Germany joined.' Cossiga adds: `It was standard policy of Nato to deny the existence of anything that it had been agreed to keep secret.'

He described how he was Interior Minister when Moro was kidnapped. He contacted Merlyn Rees, then Britain's Home Secretary, for help and together they visited the SAS headquarters in Hereford. Thus Gladio in Italy was seeking help from British forces involved in training Gladio personnel so that the Italians could put an end to an Italian terrorist action launched with the knowledge of Gladio itself.

Decimo Garau, an army doctor and friend of Cossiga, told us how he had a week's training at Poole with British special services, practising parachute landings in the English Channel before visiting the SAS at Hereford.

No less important were the continuing concerns about the political strength of the Communists. Senator Libero Gualtieri, head of the Italian parliamentary inquiry into Gladio, told us: `When Gladio was started, the Americans would often insist in their briefings, their meetings, that the organisation also had to be used to counter any insurgencies.'

Gualtieri explained how the secret service tail soon began to wag the government dog. He cites the case of Amintore Fanfani, Prime Minister six times, and Giovanni Spadolini, also Prime Minister and Defence Minister, neither of whom was informed of Gladio. `To a large extent Gladio was hidden from the politicians because we allowed a situation in which the secret services had the task of informing those in power and not vice versa.'

Licio Gelli, head of the P2 freemasons' lodge, who fought for Franco in the Spanish Civil War, was one of the greyest eminences in post-war Italy. He later became enmeshed with the Vatican in the Banco Ambrosiano swindle. After the war, he was recruited by Canadian occupying forces to work in the `stay-behind' operation being set up throughout Italy. There were, he told us, 250 Gladio squads, each consisting of nine men.

`Many came from the ranks of the mercenaries who had fought in the Spanish Civil War and many came from the fascist republic of Salo. They chose individuals who were proved anti-Communists. I know it was a well-constructed organisation. Had Communist strength grown in Italy, America would have assisted us, we would have unleashed another war and we would have been generously supplied with arms from the air.'

He is convinced that the Italian authorities let Aldo Moro go to his death. `I think Moro could have been saved. Everything can be salvaged in Italy if someone wants to salvage it.'

Vincenzo Vinciguerra, a convinced Fascist who was a member of the extremist Ordine Nuovo organisation and had close links with Gladio, has testified to us of his personal involvement in such schemes. Now serving a long sentence in Parma prison for his part in the killing of three carabinieri in the village of Peteano, he talked despite the Italian authorities' efforts to prevent access to him.

`You had to attack civilians, the people, women, children, innocent people, unknown people far removed from any political game,' he said. `The reason was quite simple. They were supposed to force these people, the Italian public, to turn to the State to ask for greater security. This is the political logic that lies behind all the massacres and the bombings which remain unpunished, because the State cannot convict itself or declare itself responsible for what happened.'

Vinciguerra recounted how the authorities covered the traces after the killing of the three carabinieri. `A whole mechanism came into action that is, the carabinieri, the Minister of the Interior, the customs services and the military and civilian intelligence services accepted the ideological reasoning behind the attack.'

The commanders of the carabinieri foiled a thorough investigation of the Peteano affair for years, he claims. `It was more convenient to cover it up than to turn on those who killed their comrades. All the members of the Red Brigades were known by the police, the carabinieri and the intelligence bureaux and no one made any attempt to stop them. So you see, revolutionary warfare should not be seen as being directed against Western democracy but rather as the means of defence adopted by Western democracies and implemented cynically and indiscriminately.'

The gravest charge against the Gladio project is that it co-operated in or at least did nothing to prevent the kidnapping and killing of Aldo Moro, a former Prime Minister of Italy. Moro, a Catholic and Christian Democrat, was known for his view that the Italian Communist Party should be brought closer to government.

It is well known that Moro died in March 1978 at the hand of the Red Brigades. What is less understood, but borne out by a number of well-informed witnesses, is that the Red Brigades were deeply infiltrated by Western intelligence. At the time of Moro's killing the principal leaders of the Brigades were in prison. Colonel Oswald Le Winter of the CIA, who served as a US liaison officer with Gladio, goes as far as to say that the planning staff of the Brigades was made up of intelligence agents. From his prison cell, Vinciguerra agrees.

How was it that Colonel Guglielmi, a senior figure in Italian intelligence, was on hand in the Via Fani in Rome when Moro was kidnapped and his bodyguards were murdered? Why did Guglielmi say he was there by accident on the way to lunch with a friend when the kidnapping happened at nine o'clock in the morning? Why was it that the bullets which killed the bodyguards were of a type only used by the Italian special forces?

As Gladio winds down and governments on the continent declare they have shut down their parts of the operation, the silence in Whitehall and the almost total lack of curiosity among MPs about an affair in which Britain was so centrally involved are remarkable. Perh aps John Major's new commitment to more openness in government will eventually produce some answers to the many Gladio riddles.


`The Ringmasters', the first of three weekly Observer Film Company programmes on Gladio in the `Timewatch' series, will be shown on BBC2 on Wednesday at 8.15pm. They are directed by Allan Francovich and produced by Kimi Zabihyan.

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HERVE




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Anti-Soviet underground network active until 1990.

By DAVID PALLISTER AND RICHARD NORTON-TAYLOR.

30 janvier 1992

The Guardian


The secret anti-Soviet "stay behind" network set up by western intelligence agencies after the second world war was still active in Britain as late as 1990.

Despite repeated refusals by the Ministry of Defence and the Foreign Office to confirm its existence, the Belgian government has admitted that it conducted a joint operation with Britain two years ago as one of several annual exercises with other European countries.

The operation, codenamed Margarita, was organised by General Van Claster, head of the Belgian military security service (SGR), who also acted as chairman of the allied co-ordination committee which has run the network, known as Gladio, since the late 1950s.

Last year, a Swiss parliamentary inquiry revealed that British special forces had collaborated closely with an armed underground Swiss organisation, called P26, in operations unknown even to the Swiss government and defence ministry. The report described P26 as being "without political or legal legitimacy", and said that documents relating to the secret Anglo-Swiss agreements had been hidden.

John MacGregor, Leader of the Commons, told MPs that it was "not our practice to comment on the details of such training". Yesterday the MoD said of the Belgian revelations: "We do not make a practice of commenting on such matters." The British network after the war consisted of arming guerrillas chosen from the civilian population. British sources claim that its role, involving both MI6 and the SAS, has in recent years been confined to training personnel from the continental networks.

The evidence from Belgium was given to a parliamentary commission chaired by Senator Roger Lallemand. The commission spent last year investigating the network after Belgians learned that even the defence minister, Guy Coeme, had been kept in the dark about its activities.

Mr Coeme's own inquiries revealed that the British link went back to 1949, when the organisation was set up by the Belgian prime minister, Paul-Henri Spaak, on advice from Sir Stewart Menzies, head of MI6.

The Belgian defence ministry provided the commission with a list of joint operations. The list included two international operations, codenamed Oregon, and six bilateral exercises between 1985 and 1990 - two each with Holland and the US and one each with Italy and Britain.

The commission was also told that the co-ordinating committee last met in October 1990, a month before the continuing existence of the network was revealed by the Italian prime minister, Guilio Andreotti.

At that meeting, the Belgian security service suggested that its role should be expanded to deal with "crisis" situations. Later, however, successive countries - Denmark, France, Italy, Luxembourg, Holland, Norway - have investigated and disbanded their national organisations.

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HERVE




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Intéressant de rappeler que le "Stay-behind" belge a été créé "by the Belgian prime minister, Paul-Henri Spaak, on advice from Sir Stewart Menzies, head of MI6."

Il est très probable que Paul-Henri Spaak connaissait bien Jacques Relecom, le père de Michel Relecom ... et ce dernier semblait mener une diplomatie parallèle. Les "Relecom" connaissaient-ils l'existence des réseaux "Stay-behind" ?

Un échange de correspondance entre Michel RELECOM et Ronald REAGAN est sur :

http://www.scribd.com/doc/81559411/Correspondance-Michel-RELECOM-Ronald-REAGAN

Michel Relecom a été président de la Chambre de commerce, d’industrie et d’agriculture Belgique-Luxembourg-Afrique-Caraïbes … et dont la société UNIBRA incluait le European Institute of Management (EIM). Il y a aussi un lien entre UNIBRA et le prince Alexandre …

Dans la diplomatie belge, il faut aussi citer Robert Rotschild et Alfred Cohen ...

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HERVE




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Sur UNIBRA :

Unibra changes name of EIM to Topline.

12 décembre 1991

De Financieel Economische Tijd


The Belgian-Zairean holding company Unibra is to change the name of its wholly-owned subsidiary EIM (European Institute of Management) to Topline, at the same time reducing its capital from BFr 14m to BFr 2m. EIM recently took a still small stake in the new Unibra subsidiary Ubifin.

EIM was set up in 1971. It has recently been brought into disrepute by suggestions that its director Rene Mayerus had used his position to pass political secrets from official police services to private security services. Links have also come to light between Mayerus and Major Jean Bougerol, the driving force behind PIO, the private information service of Paul Van Den Boeynants and Baron Benoit de Bonvoisin.


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HERVE




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Ce qui ressemble à un gros mensonge :


BELGIAN GENERAL DENIES LINKS WITH NATO GUERRILLA ORGANISATION.

11 novembre 1990

Reuters News


BRUSSELS, Nov 11, Reuter - A Belgian general in charge of military intelligence has denied links with a secret anti-Soviet guerrilla organisation set up with NATO help, the Belgian news agency Belga said on Sunday.

NATO member Italy has disclosed that the alliance set up the force, codenamed Gladio, in member countries at the start of the 1950s to organise resistance to a Soviet invasion of Italy.

Defence Minister Guy Coeme said last week a Belgian general had chaired a meeting of the group a fortnight ago.

But Major-General Raymond van Calster was quoted by Belga as saying that the group was purely an Italian affair and that he knew nothing of such operations in Belgium.

Van Calster said he attended a meeting in Brussels last month not directly linked with NATO to exchange information with other countries, but said this had nothing to do with Gladio. "We have nothing to hide," he said.

During the Cold War, there were contingency plans for a Soviet occupation, but these had only gone as far as exchanges of information, the general said.

Coeme is investigating whether Gladio was involved during the 1980s in a wave of seemingly motiveless terrorist-style killings in supermarkets near Brussels in which 28 people died.

Belgium is home to NATO headquarters.

_ _ _


ITALY'S NATO "HENCHMEN' SUSPECTED OF UNSOLVED BOMBINGS. (2 OF 2)

12 novembre 1990

Reuters News


On Sunday, Major-General Raymond van Calster, a Belgian general in charge of military intelligence, was quoted by the Belgian news agency Belga as denying links with the organisation, and saying that the group was purely an Italian affair and that he knew nothing of such operations in Belgium.

Van Calster said he attended a meeting in Brussels last month not directly linked with NATO to exchange information with other countries, but said this had nothing to do with Gladio. "We have nothing to hide," he said.

Martens said the organisation was anachronistic and Coeme said it was high time it was disbanded now the Cold War was over.

A young Venetian magistrate first sniffed out Gladio during an inquiry into a 1972 bombing that killed three paramilitary policemen. The explosives were later found to have come from a secret NATO arms dump in northern Italy.

"The original scope (of Gladio) was to be an anti-invasion force, but what happened afterwards and whether it was used in a distorted manner is part of my investigation," the magistrate, Felice Casson, 36, told Reuters in an interview.

Casson said Gladio's recruits, who numbered about 600, were mostly low-profile, "trustworthy" civilians.

Italy's political and military elite has streamed through Casson's tiny office in an 18th century courthouse on the banks of Venice's lagoon to be questioned about the secret operation.

In a letter to a parliamentary commission, Andreotti said Gladio originally was set up in the 1950s under the NATO umbrella with the help of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) using civilian volunteers and former servicemen.

What brought Gladio into being was the fear that Soviet forces could invade northern Italy, taking advantage of widespread civil strife.

Its mission in that case would have been to organise a guerrilla resistance to harrass the occupying forces until a full-blown NATO counter-attack could be organised.

President Cossiga has acknowledged that he played a role in setting up Gladio when he was a junior defence minister.

"I consider it a great privilege and an act of trust that... I was chosen for this delicate task... I have to say that I'm proud of the fact that we have kept the secret for 45 years," Cossiga said.

In a bold move late on Thursday that shocked Italy's political establishment, Casson said he wanted to question Cossiga.

Gladio had arms stockpiled in 139 secret dumps throughout the country. The arsenals were broken up in 1973, but weapons from 12 of them were never recovered, Andreotti said.

A total of 143 people were killed and another 612 were maimed in the bombings which matched the slayings of left-wing extremist group the Red Brigade during the so-called "years of lead."

As Italy continues to search for an answer to who unleashed the attacks, the question is: into whose hands did Gladio's missing arms and explosives fall?


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dislairelucien




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Monsieur Michel
Douze messages sur 4 h.! Dont 11 en anglais ! Je rappelle les directives du forum qui invite à s'exprimer en français, pour autant que de possible. Evidemment lorsqu'on se contente de copier -coller la matière s'épuise en français...
Je trouve un très long texte en anglais reprenant "gladio "et l'attaque de Vielsalm. Pour les amateurs ne serait-il pas plus intéressant de retourner sur les fils existants en français et qui ont débattus longuement des sujets?
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Hubert Bonisseur de La Ba




Nombre de messages : 218
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dislairelucien a écrit:
Monsieur Michel
Douze messages sur 4 h.! Dont 11 en anglais ! Je rappelle les directives du forum qui invite à s'exprimer en français, pour autant que de possible. Evidemment lorsqu'on se contente de copier -coller la matière s'épuise en français...
Je trouve un très long texte en anglais reprenant "gladio "et l'attaque de Vielsalm. Pour les amateurs ne serait-il pas plus intéressant de retourner sur les fils existants en français et qui ont débattus longuement des sujets?

Tout à fait d'accord avec vous Monsieur Dislaire.
Mais d'après moi ce n'est pas de la frénésie comme vous citez ailleurs, mais plutot un TOC !!!! et si le but est de lasser, c'est réussi.
Trop is te veel.
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K




Nombre de messages : 8603
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.


Dernière édition par K le Mar 2 Sep 2014 - 9:46, édité 1 fois
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Hubert Bonisseur de La Ba




Nombre de messages : 218
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Manquait plus que le maître du sabir ^^
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dislairelucien




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K a écrit:
au secours Michel

it is raining cats and dogs !

si en plus les dislaires et hubertos n'apportent que les critiques sans jamais apporter le moindre message avec des nouvelles , autant écrire sur un site fermé.


PIONT!


3982 messages qui, nous ont apportés tellement de nouvelles!
Un petit effort pour fêter le 4me millénaire pour le nouvel an!
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Henry

Henry


Nombre de messages : 2475
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Hum ! Lucien, votre vue devient déficiente, HERVE ne possède que 3296 messages.
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dislairelucien




Nombre de messages : 1137
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Herve a du retard, oui: QUE 3296 messages depuis le 08 12 2009 mais il a un handicap de dix mois au départ avec K qui caracole : Nombre de messages: 3982
Date d'inscription: 15/02/2009
J'étais certain, j'avais mis mes lunettes Shocked
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David




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Allons messieurs...On recherche tous la même chose,donnons nous la main plutôt,prenons de bonnes résolutions s'il vous plaît! flower
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HERVE




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La table des matières et l'index du livre de Peter Dale Scott

"La machine de guerre américaine"

sont sur :

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/130529134/La-machine-de-guerre-americaine-extraits



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HERVE




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Sur :

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/130546096/Total-Resistance-By-Major-H-Von-Dach-Bern

se trouve un manuel officieux de guerrilla du type "stay-behind", rédigé pour la première fois par des officiers suisses en 1958 et ayant fait l'objet de plusieurs éditions.

Celle-ci est une version anglophone, publiée par Robert K.Brown chez Paladin Press (il insiste sur son grade de capitaine, signalé sur la couverture), et préfacée par un colonel américain à la retraite, Wendell Fertig.

La traduction est l'oeuvre de Hans Lienhard "Special Warfare Language Facility, JFK Special Warfare Center, Fort Bragg".

La date de cette édition n'est pas indiquée mais elle est forcément postérieure à 1970 (création de Paladin Press). Cette édition date donc des années 70 ou 80.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_Resistance_%28book%29

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_von_Dach

L'ennemi est clairement désigné.

Par exemple, dans l'introduction américaine, du colonel Fertig :

"(...) this fine manual (...) is the first ever published that not only describes the practices of the Communists but offers method for opposing their oppressive rule".

Même la version suisse, pourtant publiée pendant la guerre froide proprement dite (en 1957-58, donc avant la "détente" des années 60-70), se montre plus allusive.

Je ne sais pas s'il y a des liens entre Robert K. Brown (Paladin Press, Omega Group Ltd) et le Paladin Group ou Aginter Presse ...

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HERVE




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Un autre extrait du livre de Peter Dale Scott...

http://fr.scribd.com/doc/130549248/La-machine-de-guerre-americaine-extrait-2

Je vois que l'on retombe sur Kashoggi ...

Il a déjà été question de nombreuses fois de ce trafiquant saoudien d'armes (qui a été qualifié d'homme le plus riche du monde).

Une des questions les plus intéressante est de savoir s'il a eu des liens avec le financier du WNP Faez el Ajjaz, syro-saoudien, lié selon au moins deux témoignages au prince Albert, très proche de J-F Calmette (que l'on ne connaît pas assez).

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HERVE




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Selon A., l'une des spécialités de CAIB était d'identifier des individus susceptibles d'être des agents de la CIA (ou s'étant avérés l'être), à partir de divers indices.

La rubrique en question s'appelait "Naming names" (elle a pris fin au bout de quelques années suite à des pressions/intimidations exercées par la CIA et le gouvernement américain).

D'après l'index (publié dans le numéro 33 (1990), on trouve ceci pour la Belgique.

Belgium

Ciazza, Adrian Bernard

Corrigan, James Lawrence

Roberts, Rowland E., Jr.


Ils ont été nommés dans le CAIB n°8 (1980).

Peut-être cela dira-t-il quelque chose à quelqu'un ?


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