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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Murky deeds, mealy mouths

Most countries carry out dirty but necessary ‘special operations’ like the Dubai killing

February 25, 2010 14:07
2 min read

There are few worlds murkier than those of espionage, counter-espionage and "special operations". These are the worlds of bluff, counter-bluff, lies, deceit, forgery, treachery, blackmail, sedition and slaughter. Most countries support "special operations" units, and the exploits of some of these have become the stuff of legend.

In his book Spycatcher (1985), the late Peter Wright chronicled some of the deeds and misdeeds of the UK's security service, for which he worked. Among these were the production of forged documents, including foreign currency notes and passports (as well as routine burglaries and the covert planting of listening devices). The security service (MI5) operates alongside the secret intelligence service (MI6), and within Wright's memoirs was the revelation that MI6 had planned to assassinate Colonel Nasser at the time of the Suez crisis.

In April 1988, the TV documentary Death on the Rock told the story of the operation, the previous month, by the Special Air Service to eliminate (eradicate, kill, murder, call it what you like) three IRA terrorists in Gibraltar.

You may find the worlds in which such entities operate, repugnant, amoral, even immoral. And I do not propose to chronicle their exploits or sing their praises. But, in seeking to point the finger at the government of Israel for its alleged involvement in the killing, in Dubai last month, of the Hamas terrorist Mahmoud al-Mabhouh (why else summon Israeli ambassador Ron Prosor to the Foreign Office?) the Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, is engaging in hypocritical humbug. And I suspect that he knows it.