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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Libya
Sunday Times alleges Britain's MI6 played role in Gadhaffi
assassination attempt
By Trevor Johnson
15 February 2000
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this version to print
A front-page story in the Sunday Times of February 13
alleges that the British government and secret services played
a role in a 1996 plot to assassinate Colonel Muammar Gadhaffi
of Libya. The London-based Times quotes extensively from
a document published on a Yahoo Internet site which reveals that
in November 1995 links were established between one of the prospective
assassins and HMGHer Majesty's government.
David Shayler, the former MI6 operative who became a whistle-blower,
first leaked details in August 1998 of a bungled assassination
attempt involving the British secret services, in which several
innocent bystanders were killed. Shayler said he was told that
MI6 had paid about £100,000 in instalments to an agent code-named
Tunworth to help purchase Jeeps and weapons. Later, at a meeting
in room 470 of Thames House, MI5's London headquarters, Shayler
said he was told that the attack had failed.
Accounts published in Arab newspapers at the time confirmed
that an attempt to assassinate Gadhaffi had taken place. Al-Hayat,
the London-based Arab newspaper, reported that rebels had attacked
Gadhaffi's motorcade near the city of Sirte in February 1996.
Several bystanders were said to have been killed. Gadhaffi claimed
to have proof of the plot. Britain was behind the campaign
of assassination. There is evidence and when the time comes we
will bring it forward, he said.
Shayler's claims were categorically denied by the Foreign Office
and Robin Cook, the British Foreign Secretary, who called it pure
fantasy. But British intelligence actually knew of the 1996
assassination attempt at least two months in advance. A member
of the assassination squad had given detailed intelligence to
his MI6 handler, in the expectation that they would receive help
from Britain.
The four-page document cited by the Sunday Times carries
a coded header that appears to confirm its authenticity. Its title
is Libya: plans to overthrow Gadhaffi in early 1996 are
well advanced. It gives details of plans in which
he was involved to overthrow Colonel Gadhaffi and says that
other plotters were aware of his contact with HMG, but did
not entirely approve of it.
The report continues: The coup was scheduled to start
at around the time of the next General People's Congress on February
14, 1996. Coup will start with unrest in Tripoli, Misratah and
Benghazi. [Previous] attempt to assassinate Gadhaffi in August
[1995] thwarted by security police.
The report gives a list of Libyan installations that were to
be attacked and describes supporters in Libya's principal cities
and their occupations. The start of the coup was to be signalled
through coded messages on television and radio.
The source told his MI6 handler that the plotters would
have cars similar to those in Gadhaffi's security entourage with
fake security number plates. They would infiltrate themselves
into the entourage in order to kill or arrest Gadhaffi.
One group of military personnel were being trained in
the desert area near Kufra for the role of attacking Gadhaffi
and his entourage," the report says. "The aim was to
attack Gadhaffi after the GPC [General People's Congress], but
before he had returned to Sirte. One officer and 20 men were being
trained for this attack. The source describes contacts between
the plotters and the Algerian and Tunisian governments, and with
Islamic terrorists.
When Robin Cook was interviewed at the time on BBC's Breakfast
with Frost current affairs programme, he insisted that MI6
had no interest in such a plot. I am perfectly satisfied
that the SIS [Secret Intelligence Service] never put forward any
such proposal for an assassination attempt, nor have I seen anything
in the 15 months that I have been in the job which would suggest
that the SIS has had any interest, any role or any experience
over the recent decades of any such escapade, Cook said.
The release of the MI6 report is highly embarrassing for Cook,
since it was passed to senior Foreign Office officials at the
time. The Foreign Secretary is now being asked whether these officials
deliberately kept it from him, or whether he was lying when he
denied any link. The leak is clearly timed to exert maximum pressure
on the Foreign Office at a time when a new Libyan ambassador is
about to be welcomed to London.
Coming as it does from a source within the security establishment,
the leaked report sheds further light on high-level splits within
the British ruling class over issues of foreign policy. The underlying
concern seems to be the relative importance given to British ties
to the US as against its ties to its European neighbours. The
US made no attempt to hide its displeasure at the recent British
decision to go against the previous line that Libya was a terrorist
rogue state by re-establishing full diplomatic links.
The US has refused to repeal the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act,
under which those trading with the Libyan regime can be subjected
to punitive measures.
It would appear that there are those within British ruling
circles who would like to forestall the rapprochement with Libya
by highlighting the unresolved differences between the two countries.
The latest incident follows hard on the heels of another embarrassing
leak that Britain had held up and then impounded a shipment of
arms said to be bound for Libya, and then kept the affair secret
so as not to disturb the restoration of diplomatic links.
See Also:
Britain extends diplomatic
recognition to Libya
[10 December 1999]
Libyan arms scandal shows
widening rift between Europe and US
[17 January 2000]
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