-Caveat Lector- "The German government is going to disband its part of 'Operation Gladio,' the [CIA-funded] secret resistance network, Bonn officials said. "According to a German television report, the section consisted of former SS and Waffen-SS officers, as well as members of an extreme rightwing group, the Federation of German Youth. It had drawn up plans to assassinate leading figures of the 'leftist' Social Democratic Party in the event of a Soviet-led invasion of Europe." (Richard Norton Taylor and David Gow, The Guardian, 17/11/90) Subj: [CTRL] Operation GLADIO - Part Three of Four Parts Date: 98-06-03 01:08:29 EDT From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (R. William Davis) To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] copyright StatesWatch OPERATION GLADIO (cont'd) 15/11/90 Official Commission on Terrorism "Italian authorities launched an official inquiry yesterday into a clandestine NATO terror group code-named Gladio...A commission will question senior officers about Gladio. Admiral Fulvio Marini was quizzed by the commission..."Gladio is virtually frozen. I can guarantee that," the admiral told [them]. (Morning Star, 16/11/90) 22/11/90 European Parliament call for enquiry into Gladio "The European Parliament yesterday called for an investigation into secret anti-communist organisations set up in the 1950s." (Guardian. 23/11/90) See Appendix 2 for full text. 28/11/90 Gladio Disbanded "Operation Gladio has been dismantled. General Paolo Inzerilli, chief of staff of the Italian security service Sismi told the parliamentary commission on terrorism that the Prime Minister issued the order on Wednesday." (Charles Richards, Independent, 1/12/90) 4/12/90 President Cossiga's speech on Gladio "In perhaps his most ill-advised intervention so far, Cossiga delivered a eulogy on the paramilitary organisation in a speech to carabinieri cadets at a training college in Rome. Calling members of Gladio patriots, the President suggested the magistrate investigating the organisation was inspired by the same subversive ideals that fuelled Italy is left-wing movements" (Bruce Johnston, Sunday Times, 9/12/90) 10/12/90 Judicial inquiry into Gladio The prosecutor of Rome...begins his examination into the possible criminal illegality of the Gladio brief. The inquiry splits into two: the Venetian judges, Felice Casson and Marco Mastelloni, will continue to work on the terrorist attack of 1972, in which three policemen were killed...The Rome prosecutor, Uga Giudiceandrea, will rule on what is called "criminal evidence", and decide whether to take legal proceedings against those involved in setting up Gladio. Among his first witnesses will be General Giovanni de Lorenzo, head of Sifar in 1959, who is embroiled in inquiries into another paramilitary network called Piano Solo, declared illegal in 1970 (Ed Vulliamy, Guardian, 10/12/90) OPERATION 'STAY-BEHIND' (THE BRITISH CONNECTION) 1940 Origins of the network? "In Britain, a guerrilla network with arms caches was already in place following the fall of France in 1940, according to senior military sources who say it was disbanded after the war. Its members, including the legendary Brigadier "Mad Mike" Calvert, were drawn from a special forces ski battalion of the Scots Guards which was originally intended to fight in nazi-occupied Finland." (David Pallister, Guardian 5/12/90) 1948 Operation Stay Behind is put into operation "The stay behind groups in Europe had their origins in the fear of communism that concentrated the minds of British and US politicians and planners after the second world war. The plan, spearheaded by the infant CIA as part of a huge covert action programme to assist anti-communist organisations, had been conceived by the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, according to the 1976 Senate report on the CIA by Frank Church which first revealed its existence. It was put into operation in 1948 by the National Security Council, which set up the Office of Policy Coordination, a covert operations unit created on the recommendation of a senior state department Soviet expert, George Keenan, the man who formulated the Marshall Plan of economic aid to western Europe. Staffed and funded by the CIA, OPCs central mission, according to Church, was to set up "stay behind nets in the event of a future war" and support Nato forces against Soviet attacks." (David Pallister, Guardian, 5/12/90) Late 1940s-1950s M16/SAS involvement "The British Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, and the SAS played their part. In the British sector of Germany, the SAS dug deep secret hides with stores of weapons. MI6 helped the CIA to recruit agents who invaded Albania in 1949 in an operation betrayed by the double agent, Kim Philby." 1950s "A secret arms network was set up in Britain during the Cold War as part of a west European anti-communist organisation, a former senior British army officer revealed to the Guardian yesterday. Plans were drawn up later to give the organisation a "secondary use" - combating the takeover of civil government by militant leftwing groups, other British sources revealed. It is the first time British participation in the Nato-orchestrated plan - which involved the arming of civilians - has been acknowledged. The network, known as the Allied Coordination committee and partly financed by British intelligence, ranged from Turkey to Portugal, and has provoked a political storm in Italy...General Sir Anthony Farrar-Hockley, a former commander-in-chief of NATO forces in northern Europe, said the organisation was based on the idea that there should be a secret network to engage in guerrilla warfare if Britain was overrun by communist forces. "The original plan was to establish a network to arm guerrillas from the civil populace while conventional forces were occupied elsewhere," he said. Sir Anthony did not say whether the network, run by officers from the security services and armed forces still existed." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 15/11/90) "General Sir John Hackett, a former commander-in-chief of the British army on the Rhine, said yesterday that a contingency plan involving "stay behind and resistance in depth" was drawn up after the second world war." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 17/11/90) 1956 British involvement in formation of Italian Gladio "Andreotti ... has admitted to parliament that a covert intelligence service was set-up forty years ago, with the help of the CIA and British agents to combat Soviet subversion or aggression." (Wolfgang Achtner, Sunday Independent, 11/11/90) "General sir Anthony Farrar-Hockley, a former commander-in-chief of NATO forces in northern Europe said...that a covert intelligence service was set up in Italy with the help of British agents and the CIA - which also partly funded it. The Italian branch of the network was known as Operation Gladio" (Richard Norton Taylor, Guardian, 15/11/90) 1970s British visit to German Training Camp "Documents shown to the [Italian Committee on Terrorism revealed that in the 1970s British and French officials involved in the network visited a training base in Germany built with US money." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 17/11/90) cl973 Gladio unit visit Britain "Britain hosted a unit responsible for organising Operation Gladio...General Gerardo Serraville, who said the Italians trained at a military base in Britain, was giving evidence in Rome to a parliamentary inquiry." (see 1990). (Richard Norton-Taylor & David Gow, Guardian, 17/11/90) 1974 British "Gladio" visit to Italy Gladio "counterparts in Britain, where the plan was given the name Operation Stay Behind, visited Italy in 1974, according to a senior Italian intelligence official." (Richard norton-Taylor & David Gow, Guardian, 17/11/90) 16/11/90 Tom King denial "The Defence secretary, Tom King, said yesterday that he had never heard of Gladio. "I'm not sure what particular hot potato you're chasing after. It sounds wonderfully exciting, but I'm afraid I'm quite ignorant about it. I'm better informed on the Gulf," Mr King said." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 17/11/90 OTHER "STAY BEHIND" OPERATIONS AUSTRIA (Schwert) "The network... in Austria is called "Schwert" (sword)" (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 16/11/90) BELGIUM (SDR-8) "The Belgian government said it was investigating possible links between its own clandestine network and a spate of particularly brutal raids on supermarkets around Brussels in the mid 1980's, in which 28 people died. Several policemen and well-known right-wingers were arrested after ballistic tests, but no one was brought to trial. (Fiona Leney & Wolfgang Achtner, Independent, 10/11/90) "The Belgian arm now existed in "cadre form" but still operated a radio communication system, he [Belgian defence Minister, Guy Coeme] said. "It was a secret service in the 1950s intended for resistance, radio networks, intelligence and - for some time a service for sabotage." The last of these functions was closed in the 1970s and there was no evidence that it had stored arms or ammunition. There have been allegations for more than a year of links between elements in the Belgian secret police and an obscure neo-nazi organisation, Westland New Post, some of whose alleged members have been charged with stealing secret NATO documents. The leader of the Post, Paul Latinus, was found dead - possibly from suicide - and a subsequent reorganisation of the Belgian secret service led to the resignation of its long term chief, Albert Rees." (John Palmer, Guardian, 10/11/90) "The network, Belgian authorities say, held its latest coordination committee meeting in Brussels during September." (John Palmer, Guardian, 10/11/90) "General Major Raymond van Calster, chief of the Belgian Army's Intelligence Service, whom some Belgian media had described as head of the Gladio network for Belgium, in an interview to the Belgian news agency Belga, denied on Saturday it existed in Belgium. He said he did not know of the alleged anti-communist cells." (Associated Press, 11/11/90) "Andre Moyen - a former member of the Belgian military security service and of the network - said Gladio was not just anti-Communist but was fighting subversion in general. "There were at least six hiding places for arms in Belgium until two months ago, and it had prepared a sabatage network" he said...[Former defence minister] de Donna said that the 17 Gladio members in Belgium went on survival training courses. He added there was also a network of "sleeping members"...He added that his predecessor had given Gladio 142 million francs (4.6 million dollars) to buy new radio equipment." (Reuter, 13/11/90) "'Shortly after I became minister of justice on January 16, 1984 I was informed about 'Stay Behind'', former Justice Minister Jean Gol said in an interview with the Socialist daily 'Le Peuple'. He said Belgium's 1984 budget contained 10 million francs (328,000 dollars) to modernise the network's sophisticated communications equipment, code-named 'Harpoon'. (P. Neuray, Associated Press, 14/11/90) "Gol said a total of 50 civilians were members of Stay Behind in 1984, most of them former World War 11 resistance agents." (Associated Press, 14/11/90) "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..." (Independent, 16/11/90) DENMARK In Oslo the Danish news agency NTB also reported that in 1978 the then Defence Minister, Mr Rolf Hansen, had admitted in parliament to the existence of such a network." (Paddy Agnew, Irish Times, 15/11/90) FRANCE (Glaive) "In Paris the defence Minister, Mr Jean-Pierre Chevenement, confirmed French involvement in the network but said that President Mitterand had abolished it. The agency AFP claims that the disbandment is "recent". Mr Chevenement said in a radio interview that "a structure did exist, set up at the beginning of the 1950s, to enable communications with a government that might have fled abroad in the event of the country being occupied." The group only had a "dormant and liaison role," he said. (Paddy Agnew, Irish Times, 15/11/90) "The French Defence Minister, Jean Pierre Chevenement, said Glaive (Sword), the French network, had been dissolved by President Mitterand, but did not say when. It had only been "dormant", he said." (Independent, 16/11/90) GERMANY "A news programme, produced by Stern magazine and to be aired Wednesday night on the private RTL television network said there was a secret anti- communist organisation in Germany that included former Nazis. The group had a "death list" that targeted several prominent leftist politicians in the event of a war with the Soviet Union, according to a summary...in advance of the broadcast." (MS Beelman, Associated Press, 14/11/90) "On Tuesday AFP quoted informed sources in Bonn as confirming that the organisation existed in Germany but the former chancellor, Mr Willy Brandt, denied any knowledge of the existence of the group. The German government yesterday confirmed plans for covert action in the event of an invasion but denied there were military units involved. A government spokesman said the government knew of plans by US intelligence agencies to recruit a network of guerrillas throughout Europe and to prepare arms caches. The plans had been developed with the knowledge of the West German secret service director, he said." (Paddy Agnew, Irish Times, 15/11/90) "Yesterday, the German government admitted the network operated there. "Precautions have been taken in West Germany, as in other NATO states, since the 1950s to secure the flow of intelligence information in the probable area of conflict [after a Soviet attack]," a German spokesman, Hans Klein, said." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 15/11/90) "The German government is to disband its part of Gladio, the secret resistance network, Bonn officials said yesterday. According to a German television report, the section consisted of former SS and Waffen-SS officers as well as members of an extreme rightwing group, the Federation of German Youth, and drew up plans to assassinate leading figures of the opposition Social Democratic Party in the event of a Soviet-led invasion." (Richard Norton Taylor & David Gow, Guardian, 17/11/90) "Documents shown to the [Italian Committee on Terrorism] revealed that in the 1970s British and French officials involved in the network visited a training base in Germany built with US money." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 17/11/90) GREECE (Operation Sheepskin) "In Greece, defence minister, Yannis Varvitsiotis, has said local commandos and the CIA set up a branch of the network in 1955 to organise guerrilla resistance to any communist invader. Known as Operation Sheepskin, it was dismantled in 1988." (John Palmer, Guardian, 10/11/90) "The Greek operation started in 1955 but the Socialist government that came to power in 1981 began to dismantle it in 1985. All arms caches were dug up and stored at a military base near Athens by 1988 when the network was finally dismantled, officials and newspaper reports have said. (Associated Press, 14/11/90) "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." (Independent, 16/11/90) "The Athens government yesterday ordered an inquiry into a secret deal- between the Greek military forces and the CIA, aimed at setting-up an anti-communist guerrilla network as part of the covert operation disclosed last month in Italy under the code name Gladio." (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 20/11/90) "In Greece, where it was given the code-name, Sheepskin, a cell was set up by the CIA in the 1950s but was dismantled in 1988, according to the government. Officers in the underground unit were involved in the Colonel's coup in 1967. (Richard Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 5/12/90) DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright frauds is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at: http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED] To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Om