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  Wage & Wages  ·  Wait & Waiting  ·  Wales & Welsh  ·  Walk & Walking  ·  Wall Street  ·  Wander  ·  Want  ·  War (I)  ·  War (II)  ·  War (III)  ·  War in Heaven  ·  War on Terror (I)  ·  War on Terror (II)  ·  Washington DC  ·  Washington State  ·  Waste  ·  Watch (See)  ·  Watch (Time)  ·  Watchers  ·  Water  ·  Watergate  ·  Weak & Weakness  ·  Wealth  ·  Weapons  ·  Weather  ·  Wedding  ·  Weep  ·  Weight  ·  Welfare & Welfare State  ·  Werewolf  ·  West & The West  ·  West Virginia  ·  Westerns & Western Films  ·  Whale  ·  Wheat  ·  Wheel & Wheels  ·  Whisky & Scotch  ·  Whistleblower  ·  White  ·  White Dwarf  ·  White Hole  ·  White House  ·  Wicked & Wickedness  ·  Widow  ·  Wife  ·  Wild & Wilderness  ·  Will (Death)  ·  Will (Resolve)  ·  William & Mary  ·  Win & Winner  ·  Wind  ·  Window  ·  Wine  ·  Winter  ·  Wisconsin  ·  Wise & Wisdom  ·  Wish  ·  Wit  ·  Witch & Witchcraft  ·  Witness  ·  Wizard  ·  Woe  ·  Wolf  ·  Woman & Women (I)  ·  Woman & Women (II)  ·  Wonder  ·  Wood  ·  Woods  ·  Wool  ·  Woolly Mammoth  ·  Words  ·  Work & Worker (I)  ·  Work & Worker (II)  ·  Working Class  ·  World  ·  World War I & First World War (I)  ·  World War I & First World War (II)  ·  World War II & Second World War (I)  ·  World War II & Second World War (II)  ·  World War II & Second World War (III)  ·  World War II & Second World War (IV)  ·  World War III  ·  Worm  ·  Wormhole  ·  Worry  ·  Worse & Worst  ·  Worship  ·  Wound  ·  Wrath  ·  Wrestling  ·  Write & Writing & Writer  ·  Wrong  ·  Wyoming  

★ Weapons

Colonel David Sterling, a war hero famous for founding the Special Air Service, the SAS.  What Sterling would do was to sell to other countries Britain’s military power: Britain would supply them with modern weapons and with mercenaries who would fight their wars for them.  ibid.

 

Sterling set up his own political party called Capricorn Africa.  He proposed an alternative form of power where people like himself would civilise the black majority.  It attracted widespread support among the white middle-class settlers.  But it was firmly rejected by politicians in London.  ibid.  

 

In 1962 John Aspinall opened his own gambling club, the Clermont Club in Mayfair.  Stirling was one of its members.  The Clermont was deliberately designed to recreate a time when Britain had been rich and powerful.  The set that Aspinall gathered around him at the Clermont were like Stirling disaffected right wingers, men who felt themselves out of tune with the consensus politics of the post-war world: they included James Goldsmith, a playboy and ferocious gambler who was to become a close friend of Stirling’s; the tycoon Tiny Roland who Stirling already knew from his time in Africa; Lord Lucan, a descendant of the man who had led the Charge of the Light Brigade; and Jim Slater, a takeover tycoon and asset-stripper who ran the notorious Slater-Walker.  What united all these men was a belief in decisive action: it was this they believed that made Britain great not moderate post-war governments.  ibid.  

 

Then an event occurred in the Middle East which gave Stirling the chance to reassert Britain’s power abroad but in a new different way: in September 1962 Egyptian troops invaded the Yemen.  ibid.  

 

They proposed a plan: a group of ex-SAS men would mount an operation to fight the Egyptians but they would do it privately.  ibid.

 

[Prince] Faisal was terrified that Nassar would invade his county next and agreed to the British idea: the Saudis would pay for the war.  ibid. 

 

The Saudis agreed to pay for the British mercenaries but also to smuggle weapons into the Yemen.  ibid.

 

What was invented in the Yemen was a new private form of foreign policy for Britain, paid for by other countries’ money.  But then at the very moment when Stirling’s team seemed to be on the brink of success, an economic crisis hit Britain which threatened his whole concept: in 1964 a new Labour government was elected; almost immediately there was a run on the pound.  ibid.

 

To save the pound Labour decided on wide-ranging spending cuts, and one of the main targets was defence.  Denis Healey had been made minister of defence, and in 1965 he began a series of enormous cutbacks; he closed the overseas’ bases and brought the troops who had once protected the empire back home.  ibid.  

  

[Denis] Healey believed that instead British defence industries should make money for the country.  The Americans were selling weapons throughout the world and Healey wanted Britain to compete with them and earn precious foreign currency.  But Britain was not very good at selling weapons until David Stirling decided to get involved.  ibid.  

 

He [Khashoggi] told Lockheed that the only way to win the [arms] deal was to bribe the Saudi government.  Ten years later in a Senate investigation Lockheed’s chairman admitted what had happened.  Stirling told the British government they would have to do the same as the Americans: pay commission to their agents in King Faisal’s entourage.  If they didn’t, Britain would lose the deal.  In December 1965 the Saudis announced they would buy the British planes: the bribes had worked.  It was the biggest export deal in Britain’s history.  And King Faisal came on a state visit to celebrate it.  It was also the beginning of the modern arms trade with the Middle East which has grown to dominate Britain’s economy.  And from it also came a much wider commercial relationship with Saudi Arabia.  ibid.  

 

By the late ’60s many of Britain’s former colonies were being torn apart by civil war.  In Nigeria the federal government were fighting a vicious campaign to stop Biafra from seceding.  The British government were secretly supplying the federal side with weapons.  Their aim was to protect Britain’s oil interests in Nigeria.   ibid.  

  

The federal government won helped by the British arms.  But the resulting scandal clearly showed the limits of openly using arms sales as a tool of foreign policy.  As coups and civil wars spread throughout the Third World, Stirling was determined to find a subtler way to maintain Britain’s influence in the world.  He set up a secret organisation called WatchGuard: its job was to provide African and Middle-Eastern leaders with a private army of British mercenaries.  They would prevent the rulers that Stirling approved of from being overthrown.  WatchGuard was a great success.  Stirling organised protection for leaders in Africa and the Middle East.  ibid.

 

In Oman many of the Sultan’s advisers were ex-SAS men.  They ran the Sultan’s guerrilla war against Marxist rebels.  The rebels made a propaganda film attacking the Sultan and his British mercenaries.  But the British won.  ibid.

 

By the early 70s [David] Stirling had become a successful businessman.  He arranged enormous arms deals, and his mercenaries kept many third-world leaders in power.  Almost single-handedly Stirling had created the foundations of Britain’s modern privatised foreign policy.  It is a hidden world of vicious guerrilla wars fought by British mercenaries, a world that occasionally surfaces in scandals like the Sandfire affair.  It all began with Stirling selling Britain’s military power to countries he approved of.  ibid.

 

The price of oil had been massively increased as a result of the Arab/Israeli war.  The oil-producing states led by King Faisal of Saudi Arabia were furious at American support for Israel.  Their action had catastrophic effects for Western economies.  ibid.  

 

Government attempts to hold down wages led to violent strikes.  To Sterling it seemed that the country he had fought to keep great was now collapsing from inside.  ibid.  

 

David Stirling returned to his traditional recruiting ground, the clubs of Mayfair.  He formed an organisation called Great Britain 75.  It was a group of military men, many of them ex-SAS.  They planned to take over the running of Britain if the strikes led to the collapse of civil order.  Stirling also formed a secret organisation within the trades unions itself; its job was to fight and undermine the leftwing union leaders.  Much of the money to fund Stirling’s operations came from his friend at the Clermont Club  James Goldsmith.  Like Sterling, Goldsmith believed that politicians no longer had the power to control Britain.  ibid.  

 

Through the summer of 1976 Arab oil money continued to leave London.  The heads of Arab banks now became powerful figures ... Denis Healey began a series of savage cuts in public expenditure.  It was the only way he believed for Britain to get a loan from the IMF and avoid bankruptcy.  But it was clear to many in his party that he had given away control of the economy to the markets.  ibid.  

 

Stirling’s mercenaries returned home after twenty years of trying to keep Britain powerful.  The country they came back to was very different from the one they had left.  ibid.

 

 

On these roads, the circulation of the most valuable and decisive commodities would permit the survival of the human race in its adaptation of the planet.  And along these roads, for better or worse, silk of course would circulate, but also religion, language, refugees, artists, technology and pandemics.  Exterminate All the Brutes s1e3: Killing at a Distance or … How I Thoroughly Enjoyed the Outing *****

 

Sudan 1898 colonials wars.  In Omdurman in 1989 the whole European arsenal was tested against a numerically superior and very determined enemy.  One of the most cheerful depicters of war was Winston Churchill, later Nobel winner for Prize for Literature.  Was the war correspondent of the Morning Post.  ‘Nothing like the battle of Obdurman will ever be seen again’, wrote Churchill in a book published after the experience.  ibid.  

 

An Historical Account of the Reconquest of the Soudan by Winston Spencer Churchill: ‘They were a condensed mass, 2,800 yards from the 32nd field battery and the gunboats.  The ranges were known.  It was a matter of machinery.  The mind was fascinated by the impending horror.  I could see it coming.  In a few seconds swift destruction would rush on these brave men … It was based on a fatal underestimation of the effectiveness of modern weapons.  Within the space of five hours, the strongest best armed and savage army yet arrayed against a modern European power had been destroyed and dispersed with hardly any difficulty, comparatively small risk and insignificant loss to the victors.  Thus ended the Battle of Omdurman, the most striking triumph ever gained by the arms of science against barbarians … only a sporting element in a splendid game.  ibid. 

 

Joseph Conrad’s book Heart of Darkness was influenced by the Battle of Omdurman.  ibid.        

 

A new era in the history of racism.  Europeans started mistaking military superiority for intellectual and even biological superiority.  That’s when things turned nasty.  No-one had to pretend any more.  ibid.  

 

Baden-Powell writes to his mother: ‘I thoroughly enjoyed the outing.  Except for want of a fight.  Which I fear will preclude our getting any medals or decoration.  ibid.  

 

Lord Salisbury, Albert Hall 4th May 1898: ‘One can roughly divide the nations of the world into the living and the dying.  The weak nations become increasingly weaker and the strong, stronger.  It was in the nature of things that the living nations would fraudulently encroach on the territory of the dying.  ibid.       

 

The Germans did not think that as a higher race they had any need to abide by treaties they made with the natives.  As in north America, the German plans for immigration presupposed that the natives were to be relieved of all land of any value.  When the Hereros resisted … every Herero found within the German borders with or without weapons was to be shot … 80,000 Hereros died in the desert.  ibid.    

 

Eugenics: The over-infatuation with genetic impurity, an impressive amount of energy put into the classification of people.  A pathological obsession for the concept of race that scientifically doesn’t exist.  ibid.       

 

 

The Myth of Pristine Wilderness: a land with no people does not exist.  The idea that America was virgin land, a wilderness inhabited by non-people called savages, is a myth.  Only through killing and displacement does it become uninhabited.  Before the arrival of the British, north America was a continent of villages, of nations, of confederations of nations.  Exterminate All the Brutes IV: The Bright Colours of Fascism 

 

The Navy seal team members who carried out the assassination of Osama bin Laden on May 2nd 2011 were reporting in real time to President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other officials in the sealed Situation Room.  Following the operation, the New York Daily News commented, ‘Along with the unseen pictures of Osama bin Laden’s corpse and questions about what Pakistan knew, intelligence officials’ reasons for dubbing the Al Qaeda boss ‘Geronimo’ remain one of the biggest mysteries of the Black Ops mission.’  ibid.    

 

Kill anything that moves.  Take no prisoners.  In California, hunting Indians was both legal and profitable.  $5 a head, 50 cents a scalp.  In 1849 the American government paid more than a million dollars to Indian hunters.  ibid.     

 

Make America Great Again, he said.  When exactly was it great?  I mean really great?  And for whom?  ibid.       

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