Asil Nadir ‘stitched up’ Navigation
|
|||||
Secret CIA Report
The
CIA Report reveals how Thatcher’s Tory government destroyed PPI and many more
British companies to conceal Maggie’s Guilty Secret. As she deceived the
public, Maggie was then behind a secret government scheme to smuggle arms from
Britain into Saddam Hussain’s Iraq. It then emerged that Saddam was busy
building a supergun and fearful her secret deals could become public knowledge
she ordered her henchman, Stephan Kock, to destroy Asil Nadir and his company.
As
she hid behind the scenes, Thatcher’s henchman Kock ordered the Serious Fraud
Office to issue 66-fraud charges against Nadir, however at the Old Bailey, as
the judge discarded 40 of the said charges; the SFO panicked and introduced a
spurious claim into proceedings made by a notorious career criminal. He alleged
Nadir had bribed the judge and the trial stopped, aware that it was a stitch up
and fearful of more to follow; naturally, Nadir disappeared back home to North
Cyprus. A police investigation found no truth in the SFO allegation and they
made a grovelling apology to the judge Too late, damage done, as Nadir
scarpered everyone in Britain found him guilty.
Authentication
The
Project Babylon CIA report and Intelligence Summary document has been examined
and authenticated by Colonel John Hughes-Wilson – check out his profile below.
John
Hughes-Wilson retired from the British Intelligence Corps in 1994 as a colonel
on NATO’s International Political Staff (Brussels). His military career
also included posts: Head of Policy Section and Senior British Intelligence
Officer, SHAPE. [Mons] and Intelligence, Counter Terrorism, Special Forces. UK/
NATO appointments Command and Staff. His
30 years' of service included the Falklands, Cyprus, Northern Ireland and the
desert as well as the jungles of Whitehall, is an author, broadcaster and
lecturer, who specialises in military history and intelligence.
Colonel
John Hughes-Wilson is an Associate Fellow of RUSI and an Archives Bi-Fellow of
Churchill College Cambridge. He has worked as an intelligence consultant for the
UN and EU, as well as the Swiss General Staff and the Palestinian
Anti-Terrorist Police. He is a visiting Reader on Intelligence for Cranfield
University's Global Security MSc course and the author of Military Intelligence Blunders and
Cover-ups (Constable and
Robinson, 2004) and The Puppet Masters: Spies, Traitors and the Real Forces
Behind World Events (Phoenix,
Weiderfeld and Nicolson, 2005)
Verbatim copy of the Project Babylon Intelligence
Summary.
Please
note, the document extends to 25 pages, we are only concerned with the last
three pages. The preceding 22 pages contain very technical information that the
CIA once deemed secret, such particulars are now considered outdated.
The
CIA made available a similar, but declassified and redacted version of Project
Babylon to the public, however when they later found that an unredacted copy of
Project Babylon was made available to the public, the CIA’s guilty secret, they
changed the orginal version of the document previously exhibited on their
website.
This
version of the CIA Intelligence Summary is the unredacted classified original.
Please also see Maggie’s Guilty Secret, which provides informative background to Project
Babylon.
Project
Babylon Intelligence Summary
Intelligence summary page 23
Supergun:
A Unique Diversionary Vehicle
Albeit
not envisaged as such at the time of its inception, an extraordinary
development, Project Babylon emerged as a unique diversionary vehicle. As the
Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) shared reports about the Iraqi supergun with
us, they realized that it held the capacity to limit damage to the UK
government and shield the White House in the event of political exposure of UK
covert arms deals with Iraq, a country whose leader, Saddam Husayn, we saw as a
potentially stabilizing influence in the region.
Covert
Arms Deals with Iraq
The
situation that made Project Babylon feasible began in 1981, as UK Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher sought to grow the British economy through covert
arms deals with Iraq, then at war with Iran. In 1982, at the outbreak of the
Falklands conflict, Thatcher sought assistance from the US administration and
subsequently, we provided intelligence support. Consequently, in 1983, directed
by White House strategy, we coordinated covert operation with MI6 that eluded
Congressional precincts and projected UK rules that sustained arms sales to
Iraq via global covert routes established by the UK. In alliance with MI6, we
set up Allivane International, at the core of covert deals with Iraq. Its
ultimate owner , Chilean arms dealer Carlos Cardoen, received funds from the UK
and played a key role. He used false end user certificates that disguised true
consignment destinations, as his company shipped arms to Iraq via Chile and
Jordan. Our strategy accelerated, via the British Embassy in Washington, when
we advised UK arms producer Astra, whom we saw as pivotal to our strategy, to
share offices in London, England, with the Institute for the Study of Conflict,
headed up b UK Security Service (MI5) agent Brian Crozier. It enabled us to
monitor and coordinate Astra’s projected covert deals.
In
1984, the UK issued guidelines theoretically intended to limit arms sales to
Iraq, intentionally flexible, as the deals flourished, in 1985, Thatcher signed
the Jordan Defense Package with King Husayn; it initiated a conduit to Iraq,
and subsequently, Thatcher announced the arms to Iraq guidelines to Parliament.
In 1986, Stephan Adolf Kock joined Astra from the UK Midland Bank secret
defense department. Kock led an MI6 strategic infiltration into Astra to
conceal covert deals, while MI5 controlled Mark Gutteridge as export manager
for Iraqi-owned Matrix Churchill, a ‘dual purpose’ tooling producer based in
the UK. In 1987, Saddam Husayn desired indigenous arms production with help
from Matrix Churchill and Astra consultant Roy Ricks, subsequently, Technology
and Development Group, subsidiary of Al-Arabi Trading run by our mole, Husayn
Kamel Hassan al-Majid in Baghdad, acqui9red Matrix Churchill. This move helped
Cardoen build a missile factory in Iraq. Meantime, Astra bought Walter Group,
which produced fuses for Iraq through our agent Jim Guerin of International
Signals Corporation, (ISC) based in the UK, subsequently, merged with Ferranti.
As Iraq became the UK’s major customer, the Iranian procurement office in
London, England, was closed down.
In
1988, Husayn Kamel, head of Iraqi procurement, met Gerald Bull in Baghdad, and
Iran funded Bull’s supergun, subsequently, Project Babylon executive,
Christopher Cowley approached UK engineers Sheffield Forgemasters and Walter
Somers to produce barrel tubes for the supergun and shortly, they began work on
the project. Meantime, Iraq invited Bull to Saad 16, Iraq’s top-secret
military-industrial center engaged in missile production with nuclear
potential.
As
Astra acquired BMARC, its executive unaware of BMARC’s covert deals via conduit
countries to Iraq. Kock conceived a strategy against potential exposure. Meantime,
when Astra approached Belgian company Societe General de Belgique (SGB)-Geshem,
to acquire Pouderies Reunies de Belgique (PRB), they blocked Astra’s proposal
due to a review of US-UK pro-Iraq policy as Pakistan acquired nuclear
capability.
Intelligence
summary page 24
As
the UN negotiated a ceasefire in the Iran-Iraq War, and the UK relaxed arms to
Iraq guidelines, Allivane and the Ministry of Defense (MoD) used new covert
routes to conceal irregular arms consignments. Frank Machon, based in Scotland,
had shipped huge consignments of fuses produced by Royal Ordnance, and
subsequently, the trucking agent shipped similar consignments of fuses
disguised as automobile components and a test consignment of Bull’s supergun
propellant disguised as chocolate destined for packaging by Unipac based in
Cyprus, before shipment to Jordan. Subsequently, the Royal Air Force shipped
similar covert consignments to Jordan via Cyprus.
In
1989, as BMARC accepted a covert deal between Ordnance Technologies (Ordtec)
and Bull’s Space Research Corporation (SRC) for fuses bound for Iraq, Astra CEO
Gerald James’s awareness of such deals risked exposure of Kock’s objective. As
Kock endeavored to eject James from the Astra executive, he hired Thatcher’s
Conservative party lawyers to advise him on a strategy to shield Astra’s covert
deals.
Subsequent
to the US-UK policy review, as we thwarted Bull’s attempts to buy PRB, it
vetoed exposure covert deals, and instead, via SGB-Geshem, we proceeded top
sell PRB to Astra. As James closed the deal it gave Kock control of PRB.
Meantime, the UK Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) backed Astra and twelve
more UK arms dealers to attend Iraq’s arms fair in Baghdad, which exhibited a
model of Bull’s su0pergun. Meantime, Iraq coveted extended-range Scud missiles
with help from Matrix Churchill, and Bull’s ingenuity.
The
UK pledged Bull funds to buy carbon fiber plant Learfan in Northern Ireland; it
formed part of Iraq’s nuclear missiles program. Pressure from US and Israel
reversed the proposition. Bull’s dissent ended when Kock informed him via the
UK Foreign Office that he could meet with an “imminent accident.”
Upon
closure of the PRB deal Kock discovered that James and his chief executive
Christopher Gumbley had examined PRB deals, and had found the supergun
propellant contract and other covert Iraqi arms deals. Consequently, Roger
Holdness (MI6) discussed the supergun with James and Gumbley and ordered the
PRB consignment to proceed, once again, disguised as chocolate but this time
shipped by the Belgian Air Force.
As
Thatcher informed Parliament that supplies of British defense equipment to Iraq
continued to be governed by UK guidelines introduced in 1985, intelligence of
UK covert deals via PRB epitomized a powerful political weapon. Consequently,
Kock need to know if James had discovered that Bull’s SRC had made a superior
offer for PRB. As Holdness questioned James, he reported to Kock that the Astra
CEO seemed ignorant about that aspect of the deal. However, in an endeavor to
sustain his position, James provided further evidence to the MoD relating to
the supergun propellant deal. Consequently, as Kock executed the endgame, the
UK Special Air Service (SAS) destroyed the PRB supergun propellant plant at
Kaulille, Belgium.
The
Endgame Strategy
In
1990, as Kock accelerated the endgame, a whole host of UK executives and
companies connected with covert arms deals were arrested or imploded to prevent
exposure. Consequently, Kock arranged a summit with MoD-MI5-MI6 to plan
strategy approved by Thatcher’s lawyers to shield Astra’s covert deals and
counter threat posed by James and Astra executive. Meantime, as Kock kept them
under surveillance, Gumbley learned that Bull was gathering intelligence about
the covert UK deal that compelled SGB-Gechem to sell PRB to Astra.
Intelligence
summary page 25
As Sir John Cuckney (ex-MI5),
onetime chairman of UK state-owned International Military Services (IMS),
supported Kock; he finally forced James to resign as Astra CEO. Kock brought in
Roy Barber (MI5) to replace James and appointed new lawyers, hiring MI6 agent
Robert Burrow, a partner with SJ Berwin, London, England. He began work
concealing Astra’s covert deals via Unipac. Meantime, Gumbley resigned from
Astra, ultimately, Kock forced all the remaining Astra executives aware of the
PRB deal to resign.
As Gumbley travelled to Brussels
to meet Bull, Kock maintained surveillance and discovered that they planned a
lawsuit to expose UK covert deals. Consequently, Kock hired Ian Jack and Terry
Hardy, (SAS) to eliminate Bull. Subsequently, MoD police arrested Gumbley. He
served 9 months in prison on fabricated charges. Meantime, as we coordinated an
MI6 set-up, alleged nuclear capacitors shipped from US by Euromac for Iraq was
seized at Heathrow Airport, it led to the arrest of CEO Ali Daghir and Jeanine
Speckman. Meantime, Kock found that defense journalist, Jonathan Moyle,
possessed evidence of UK covert deals. Consequently, Kock and Holdness
eliminated him in Santiago, Chile.
Kock manipulated Project Babylon
to divert media attention from the covert arms deals, and tipped off UK
Customs. They raided a port in Middlesborough, England, and seized the final
supergun consignment of barrel tubes. Kock believed that the media would leap
upon the supergun story. As Bull’s project engaged the public imagination, it
concealed from them the true extent of UK-approved covert deals. Although Bull
had informed the UK about the true purpose of the barrel tubes from the outset,
Secretary of State Ridley told Parliament that the UK had only just become
aware of Project Babylon.
As
the UK continued to deflect responsibility, Kock arranged the arrest of
supergun project manager Cowley and Walter Somers CEO Peter Mitchell, along
with several Forgemasters and Walter Somers personnel. UK Customs raided Matrix
Churchill, and arrested three executives, while MoD police arrested Ordtec and
SRC executives connected to BMARC deals; the (mostly MI6) BMARC executive was
protected to avoid exposure. Kock requested the DTI hold a public inquiry into
Astra. Subsequently, Kock arranged the arrest of Unipac CEO Asil Nadir via the
UK Serious Fraud Office. However, charges against Cowley and Mitchell were
dropped for fear of exposure of UK deals with Iraqi supergun. As the
Conservative Party sought to avoid defeat in the upcoming UK election, they
lost confidence in Thatcher and forced her to resign.
In
1991, incoming Prime Minister John Major told Parliament that for some
considerable time the UK had not supplied arms to Iraq. Meantime, Kock had
covert deals informant Lionel Jones eliminated. As the DTI Select Committee
Inquiry into arms to Iraq began, BCCI, based in London, England, involved in
arms, drugs deals and donations to Conservative Party funds, was closed down.
As Kock completed his strategy, he had former Belgian Deputy Prime Minister
Andre Cools eliminated as he was about to investigate the sale of PRB to Astra.
IMS, involved in cover deals through PRB, ceased trading and all records
destroyed. As the DTI repeated Thatcher’s assurance of 1989, to Parliament:
‘Our examination of the records shows that the policy announced in Parliament
(in 1985) was adhered to both in the spirit and the letter.’
Blog inspired by the memory of my late parents - both murdered by Maggie Thatcher




No comments:
Post a Comment