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Article, notes and
comments
From: "Scott Lavers"
Date: Sat, 31 Oct 1998 01:31:11 -0000
INSIDE GROUP 13.
RUMOURS ABOUND ABOUT A COVERT GROUP OF FORMER SAS AND MILITARY
INTELLIGENCE OFFICERS WHO ARE SAID TO BE STATE ASSASSINS.
In 1991, private investigator Gary Murray decided to write a chapter
for
his book, Enemies of the State - an expose of the covert activities of the
British security services - on a shadowy UK paramilitary unit called Group
13. The sole purpose of this ultra-secretive unit is believed to be
state-sponsored assassination, but so little is known about its operations
that Murray knew it would be a daunting task. However, as a former civilian
undercover agent for the security services, he was resonably confident
that he would succeed. He soon changed his mind.
One day, while he was gathering material for the chapter, Murray
was forcibly dragged into the back of an unmarked van and had a gun thrust
to his head. A voice told him it would be unwise for him to continue with
his project. Sensibly, Murray took the warning seriously and decided to abandon
his research into Group 13 altogether.
Group 13 is generally believed to have evolved from former SAS soldiers,
security, and intelligence operatives who were once active in Northern Ireland
during the mid-to-late 1970's when a labour government was still
in power. The SAS had been sent to Northern Ireland in 1969 to perform covert
operations against the IRA. To cover their deployment to such a politically
sensitive area, the SAS chose the guise of 'training teams'. A succession
of cover names were used over the next two years - such as the Military
Reconnaissance Force, the 14th Intelligence Unit, and the Fourth Field Survey
Troop, Royal Engineers (FFST).
Fred Holroyd, a Captian in British Army Intelligence who served
in Nothern Ireland in the mid-1970's, claims that the FFST was an SAS undercover
unit stationed at the Royal Engineers base at Castiledillion, in Armagh.
Holroyds brief was to develop informers and other intelligence sources connected
to the IRA. It was inherently dangerous work, made worse by a territorial
battle between factions inside MI5 and MI6 for control of the Northern Ireland
'patch'. When interviewed Holroyd recalled incidents where one
of these factions would plant a bomb, and then place the blame on the IRA.
Holroyd is doubtful that the FFST went on to become Group 13, but there
are a number of other possible origins for the covert assassination
team.
The election victory of the Labour Party in February 1974 was closely
followed by rumours of an impending coup d'etat by right-wing groups operating
in the shadows of power. These groups viewed Prime Minister
Harold Wilson as a Communist taking orders from Moscow, and saw a coup as
the
only way of keeping Britain out of Moscows wily grasp.One of these groups
was named GB75, and was organized by David Sterling, founder of the SAS.
Significantly, GB75 had close contacts with the British intelligence
community, from which they probably received unofficial support.
Another group, founded in 1970, called itself the Resistance and
Psychological Operations Committee (RPOC). According to one former member,
RPOC had a clandestine section, which formed an underground resistance movement
in the event that Russia invaded the UK. With tacit approval
from the Conservative government of the day, the RPOC formed close ties with
the British security and intelligence apparatus, and '...forged close links
with the SAS's... own secret intelligence network'. Little is known about
this network, apart from one enlightening publication.
In his book, The Feather Men, Ranulph Fiennes, the Arctic trekker
and one-time member of the SAS, reveals the existence of an unofficial group
of ex-SAS officers and soldiers. This covert group, Fiennes claims, were
tasked with protecting members of the SAS whose lives were under threat as
a
result of their activities. Fiennes goes on to explain that, when a freelance
team of assassins was sent to kill him, this secretive ex-SAS group had more
or less 'mopped up' (that is, killed) the would-be assassins. Fiennes further
alleges that this SAS team had been founded by David Sterling. It is not
possible to say with any certainty that this team - or elements within
it - evolved to become Group 13. However, the associations are clearly similar.
The exsistence of both these groups is highly unofficial but desirable
to certain factions within the government. Both groups are said to be responsible
for political assassinations in Northrn Ireland and elsewhere. And both appear
to lean towards right-wing agendas.
Despite the thick smokescreen that Group 13, speculation is rife
about
its alleged 'targets'. High on the list is the murder of defense journalist
Jonathan Moyle in a hotel room in Santiago, Chile, in March 1990. Moyle
had been gathering damning evidence of British involvment in equiping helicopters
for Iraq. Although his killers were never found, US State Department and
CIA documents reveal that, shortly before he was mudered, Moyle's hotel was
regularly visited by two men with known British security and intelligence
connections.
Another operation that may be linked to Group 13 is the murder of
WPC
Yvonne Fletcher outside the Libyan People's Bureau in London 1984. In a
courageous piece of television, Channel Four broadcast a Dispatches programme
in
1996 that suggested that WPC Fletcher was murdered by elements inside British
and American intelligence. Among other startling facts, the programme stated
that the shot that had killed Fletcher may have been a 'terminal velocity'
round. This technique reduces the sound of the gunshot and creates the impression
that the shot was fired from a considerable distance. It is
a known technique of SAS snipers.
Fresh information about Group 13 came to light in Febuary 1996 following
the publication of the Scott Report on the arms-to-Iraq affair. During a
lenghty interview, Gerald James, the former Chairman of Astra Holdings Plc
- one
of the British munitions manufacturers implicated in the illegal weapons
trade - told how he had been ousted from the board of Astra in 1990. He alleges
that his removal was orchestrated by a former member of Group
13, who had extremely high-level contacts in the intelligence community and
the government. In written evidence presented to the House of Commons Trade
and Industry Commitee Inquiry into arms exports to Iraq, on 5th February
1992, James claimed that he had learned through reliable sources that Group
13 is 'apparently a hit or contract squad for the Foreign Office and Secuirity
Services'.
In his explosive book, In The Public Interest (1995), which blows
the
lid off British involvement in Arming Iraq's Saddam Hussein, James writes
that 'The Foreign Office is said to draw Group 13 operatives from the SAS
as
well as from private security firms'. He adds that Group 13's duties involve
'service to the nation of a kind only given to the most ruthlessly experienced
SAS officers'. The Foreign Office reference clearly points
to a MI6 connection. Known also as the Secret Intelligence Service - a name
well known by lovers of the Bond movies - MI6 comes under the control of
the Foreign Office. Perhaps the infamous '007: License to Kill' pedigree
has evolved from those fictional suave men in black bow ties and tuxedos,
to become those all-to-secretive men in camouflage smocks and beret badges
inscribed with the motto "Who Dares Wins".
CASE NOTES
Ther is some evidence to suggest that UK Secret Service hit squads have links with similar groups in the US. According to J. Olin Grabbe, a retired American professor, a highly secret US assassination team operates out of the NSA. The unit, Grabbe claims, is called I-3 and is thought by some to have connections with Britain's Group 13. Also, ex-CIA operative Gene 'Chip' Tatum maintains that he was a member of an American-based, international assassination team. The team, Tatum claims, is called Pegasus and operates around the world. Targets are normally influential politicians and financiers. Tatum also has stated that the British end of Pegasus was run during the mid-1980's by a high-ranking British government official.
DELTA GREEN NOTES
If Group 13 exsists who could they be allied to, from article above, connections with the NSA could point to MJ-12's NRO SECTION DELTA, or if Group 13 looks after SAS personnel as also stated, they could be used as allies against the possible Shan investation of British Intelligence, possibly even helping the Army of the Third Eye. Your thoughts and comments would be appreciated.
Date: Fri, 30 Oct 1998 22:21:06 -0600 (CST)
From: Tenebrous Technologies
>One day, while he was gathering material for the chapter, Murray
was
>forcibly dragged into the back of an unmarked van and had a gun
thrust
to
>his head. A voice told him it would be unwise for him to continue
with his
>project. Sensibly, Murray took the warning seriously and
decided to
abandon
>his research into Group 13 altogether.
Ahhh, how politely British, had it been the US of A he probably would have been found in the trunk of his car with a hole in his head and while the story was broadcast in a 30 second infobit on CNN, the rest of the public would be watching yet another ass slapping on 'Friends'. ;)
Date: Sat, 31 Oct 1998 10:29:08 -0500
From: Nightstar
>RUMOURS ABOUND ABOUT A COVERT GROUP OF FORMER SAS AND MILITARY INTELLIGENCE
>OFFICERS WHO ARE SAID TO BE STATE ASSASSINS.
>SNIP<
>DELTA GREEN NOTES
>If Group 13 exsists who could they be allied to, from article
above,
>connections with the NSA could point to MJ-12's NRO SECTION
DELTA,
or if
>Group 13 looks after SAS personnel as also stated, they could
be used
as
>allies against the possible Shan investation of British
Intelligence,
>possibly even helping the Army of the Third Eye. Your
thoughts and
comments
>would be appreciated.
Good Stuff! This is exactly why this list is the best I've ever seen! I will definately find a use for Group 13!
Date: Sat, 31 Oct 1998 12:12:14 EST
Very interesting article! I wouldn't take it at face value as a piece of journalism (can we say 'agenda'?), but it's great conspiracy-theory fodder for DG. What publication was it from?
Date: Sun, 1 Nov 1998 00:50:52 -0000
The article was from a magazine called THE X-FACTOR published in the UK by Marshall-Cavendish. There is a link to their website on mine.