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              | Date: 2001-02-10 
 
 UK/USA: MI5 & MI6  & Troubles fuer Cryptome-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 Netz/dokumentarist John Young hat offenbar Schwierigkeiten
 mit jenen Nachrichtendiensten, die global mit den merkbar
 übelsten Manieren ausgestattet sind: den Briten.
 
 John ist der Ansicht, dass in der herauf/dämmernden
 Informationsgesellschaft Normalsterblichen so viele
 Nachrichten wie möglich über die Aktivitäten geheimer
 Nachrichtendienste zur Verfügung stehen sollten.
 
 Nach den vorherigen Bröseln mit MI5 scheint nun die Truppe,
 die am gegenüberliegenden Ufer der Themse residiert,
 nämlich MI6, hauptsächlich involviert zu sein.
 
 post/scrypt: John, der Deutsch liest, ist seit den
 Anfangstagen auf dieser Liste subscribiert.
 
 http://cryptome.org/fru-walshaw.htm
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 Relayed by Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
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 John Young, who operates the cryptome.org document
 archive, says the British government is applying pressure to
 his ISP to censor a news article on his site titled "Enquiry:
 The Killing Years in Ireland."
 
 He believes London has somehow gained access to his log
 files -- cryptome.org is hosted by Verio -- and has handed
 that information to reporters. This comes after prior run-ins
 that John has had with MI5: http://cryptome.org/mi5-verio.htm
 
 More on John Young:
 
 http://www.mccullagh.org/cgi-bin/photosearch.cgi?name=john+young
 
 ENQUIRY : THE KILLING YEARS IN IRELAND 3 February
 2001
 
 By ANON = MAHARAJAH
 
 British journalists, police officers and Army undercover
 intelligence agents are increasingly in battle with each other
 as an intelligence scandal threatens to expose a series of
 state-sponsored killing of the kind more commonly
 associated with former South American dictatorships than
 with a modern western European nation.
 
 For the last two years, British security authorities have
 resorted to legal duress and intimidation tactics to conceal
 the identity and activities of Army intelligence operators who
 played a key role in a secret unit that set up innocent
 civilians to be murdered, actively collaborated with and fed
 intelligence to death squads, and then set fire to police
 offices to destroy their files and prevent an investigation
 uncovering their activities.
 
 The secret unit, called the Force Research Unit (FRU) was a
 high level intelligence unit tasked with handling undercover
 agents in Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic. It was set
 up in the early 1980s to take over previously unco-ordinated
 agent running activities, placing them all under a single
 professional command structure.
 
 The lawless misconduct of FRU has come to light over the
 last two years as a result of an extended police enquiry into
 controversial assassinations by the Protestant terrorist
 organisation, including the Ulster Defence Association
 (UDA). The enquiries originally focussed on the slaying of
 prominent republican lawyer Pat Finucane in February 1989.
 
 It has since emerged that Finucane's killing was planned by
 the UDA's intelligence officer, Brian Nelson. But, unknown to
 his terrorist colleagues, Nelson was a British intelligence
 agent. He was being run by the FRU, to whom he reported
 routinely, exchanging information on republicans whom the
 UDA sought to kill. The UDA's quartermaster, William Stobie,
 who provided the murder weapons and hid them afterwards,
 was also a British agent. He worked for the Special Branch of
 the Royal Ulster Constabulary, the police force of Northern
 Ireland.
 
 Former members of the FRU have told journalists that up to
 13 Irish Catholics were killed in this way. One case which
 came to light last year was the 1987 murder of a Catholic
 pensioner living in West Belfast, Francisco Notorantonio.
 Notorantonio, aged 66 when he died, had not been involved in
 politics for 30 years. He was set up to be killed by the FRU,
 as a sacrificial victim to protect a top British agent.
 
 Shortly before the murder, FRU had been informed of a plan
 to kill a leading member of the IRA, who was secretly a
 British intelligence agent. Codenamed STAKEKNIFE, the
 agent was and still is British intelligence's longest term and
 most successful informant inside the Irish terrorist group.
 When they learned of the plot, the FRU panicked. To head
 the killers away from STAKEKNIFE, they prepared and
 handed over a false dossier, suggesting that the innocent and
 harmless Notorantonio would be a better target for their
 bullets.
 
 The existence and importance of Agent STAKEKNIFE has
 recently been publicly confirmed by the police investigation
 which is determined to undercover the truth of the FRU affair.
 The investigation is headed by Sir John Stevens, the
 Commissioner of the Metropolitan (London) Police. He is
 Britain's most senior police officer. Ten years earlier, when he
 was in a less senior position, Stevens was first asked to
 investigate the killings in Northern Ireland. As he and his
 team started to uncover the nature of Army collusion with
 protestant terrorists, he faced an arson attack. The teams'
 offices, which were located in a highly secure police
 headquarters building with multiple alarm systems, went on
 fire, destroying the files. The attack effectively brought
 Stevens' first enquiry to a fruitless end.
 
 The mystery of how sophisticated alarms had been disabled
 to get in and burn the files was solved when a former member
 of the FRU came forward and revealed that they had been
 responsible for the crime. The breaking, entering and
 fireraising had been carried out by a team from Army
 intelligence's CME (Covert Methods of Entry) unit. Called in
 by the FRU commander to destroy the incriminating evidence
 accumulating in police hands, the CME team flew in from
 England and carried out the arson attack on the police. They
 crudely attempted to disguise the fire as having been started
 by a cigarette left in a waste bin.
 
 Three years ago, Sir John Stevens, now promoted to be the
 commissioner of the Metropolitan police, was asked to
 conduct another enquiry into collusion in Northern Ireland,
 focusing on the murder of Patrick Finucane. Since then, he
 and his operational assistant, Deputy Assistant
 Commissioner Hugh Orde, have made it clear that they are
 not going to be deflected by Army dirty tricks and
 disinformation.
 
 The former soldier who came forward used the pseudonym
 "Martin Ingram". The Ministry of Defence responded
 ferociously. One soldier whom they believed to be Ingram
 was charged under the Official Secrets Act. Journalists to
 whom he spoke were threatened with prosecution. The
 charges meant that while one police enquiry was relying on
 him as a key witness, another police enquiry was trying to
 silence him.
 
 But, with increasing controversy surrounding British secrecy
 laws, the charges against "Ingram" had to be dropped.
 Harassment then started from a new quarter. A group calling
 itself "friends of FRU" started circulating personal information
 about him. One former FRU colleague e-mailed dozens of
 newspapers giving details of "Ingram" 's identity, address and
 activities. He was being set up.
 
 The former FRU soldier behind the e-mail campaign was
 arrested for harassment. But then the charges were dropped.
 Fearing that the police could not protect him safely, "Ingram"
 withdrew his evidence from the Stevens enquiry.
 
 Two weeks ago on Ulster Television, another member of FRU
 came forward to talk about what the unit had done. Agreeing
 that there had been a policy of "shoot to kill by proxy", the
 former the FRU member said that his unit had acted as
 "judge, jury and executioner ... [it was] immoral and probably
 unlawful".
 
 FRU is still operating, running agents in Ireland. Since it
 became controversial, it has adopted a new cover name. This
 is JCU(NI). It stands for the Joint Collection Unit (Northern
 Ireland). It works directly with the British Security Service
 ("MI5"), which also has offices and technical teams on the
 ground in Northern Ireland.
 
 To confuse the many British journalists who are now
 investigating the activities of FRU, another intelligence unit
 was renamed FIU. This is the Force Intelligence Unit. It has
 nothing to do with FRU, but runs more orthodox intelligence
 activities, such as the computer called CAISTER which holds
 "fine grain" intelligence files on most of the Northern Ireland
 population. It was formerly called 12 Intelligence Company.
 
 A third group in the undercover world of Northern Ireland is
 the Joint Support Group (JSG). Formerly known by a variety
 of names such as "14 Intelligence Company" or "The Dets",
 it provides undercover surveillance teams for long-term
 surveillance activities. Its teams work closely with the SAS
 detachment based in Northern Ireland.
 
 Until now, mystery has surrounded the identity of the agent
 handler who was Brian Nelson's link to the Army and who
 passed on the critical instructions and government
 intelligence to enable the protestants to murder the Army's
 selected targets. But the name leaked out late last year.
 
 Early in December, the government threatened legal action to
 gag the Sunday Herald, a Scottish newspaper, after former
 colleagues of Nelson's handler revealed her identity to their
 journalists. The paper was compelled under threat of legal
 order to undertake that it would not reveal her name, location
 or identify her by printing a photograph.
 
 Then the case for conspiracy to murder against her and the
 officers who gave her orders grew stronger, after police
 Commissioner Orde revealed that he had recovered boxes of
 army intelligence documents called "contact forms" and
 MISRs (Military Intelligence Source Reports). The contact
 forms give details of every meeting between agents and their
 handlers. The MISR reported detailed and assessed the
 intelligence provided by the agents. The police found that
 some of the reports were "incriminating".
 
 The officer who commanded the Force Research Unit during
 the killing years was Lt Colonel Gordon Kerr. He has since
 been promoted to Brigadier. As the British police homed on
 his importance, he was sent to the other side of the world, to
 serve as the British military attaché in Beijing.
 
 The intelligence operator who handled Brian Nelson - whose
 name is banned in Britain - is Captain Margaret Walshaw.
 Although any British newspaper editor who published her
 name is threatened with imprisonment, she is openly listed in
 the current official British government publication, the "Army
 List". At the time she ran agent Brian Nelson and supervised
 his murderous activities, she was a non commissioned officer
 (sergeant) in Britain's Intelligence Corps.
 
 On 1st April 1998, Sergeant Walshaw was promoted from the
 ranks to become an officer. She has also been awarded the
 "British Empire Medal" for her achievements.
 
 
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 edited by
 published on: 2001-02-10
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
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