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  • Death of a mercenary

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    April 15 2005

    Death of a mercenary

    By Yossi Melman

    About 10 days ago, my phone rang in the middle of the night. "My name
    is Dr. Alexander fvon Paleske and I am calling you from Gaborone," a
    man's voice said in English tinged with a heavy German accent. "Have
    you heard about the coup in Equatorial Guinea?" Dr. Von Paleske is
    head of the oncology department at Princess Marina Hospital in
    Gaborone, the capital of Botswana, in southern Africa. "I want to
    remove the mercenaries from Africa," he explained. "As a physician, I
    see the disastrous consequences of their criminal deeds on the
    continent."

    Why did you call me, of all people?

    Von Pleske: "Because I found your name on the Internet in the context
    of Gerhard Eugen Merz."

    What is your connection with him?

    "I have no direct connection with him."

    Gerhard Merz was an arms dealer; I didn't know he was a mercenary.

    "He certainly was. He was murdered during the coup attempt in
    Equatorial Guinea."

    On March 7, 2004, the Zimbabwe police detained a chartered plane that
    had arrived in Harare, the capital, from South Africa, and arrested
    70 of the passengers. Most of those detained were South African
    citizens. They said they had been hired by a security consultancy
    company to guard a diamond mine in Congo. A few days later, the
    government of Equatorial Guinea announced that its police had
    arrested 20 people, most of them Armenians and South Africans, who
    were the vanguard for the force that was arrested in Harare.
    According to the announcement, the two groups were connected and had
    planned to topple the regime of President Teodoro Obiang.

    Merz, who was one of those arrested in Malabo, the capital of
    Equatorial Guinea, was suspected of being the conspirators'
    "transportation officer," his task being to supply them with a plane
    and an Armenian crew, and to look after the flight arrangements. Merz
    died about 10 days after his arrest; his body was flown to Germany
    and buried there. The official cause of death was malaria, but Von
    Paleske is convinced that Merz was murdered. He therefore asked the
    German authorities to perform an autopsy to determine the cause of
    death.

    The Israeli connection

    Who was Gerhard Merz? Very little is known about him. He was born in
    Frankfurt in 1947. During his youth he stayed for a while in Israel.
    In 1963 he returned to Germany. Attempts to find information about
    his status and activities in Israel from the Interior Ministry and
    from other sources were unsuccessful. What Merz did for the next 30
    years - from the time he left Israel until May 18, 1995 - is not
    known. At that time his name was included in an executive order
    signed by U.S. President Bill Clinton and sent to Congress, stating
    that Merz had been involved in "proliferation of nuclear, biological
    and chemical weapons" to Iran. (Clinton signed the order in November
    1994; the date in May refers to his letter to Congress informing them
    of the fact; see http://fas.org/spp/starwars/offdocs/w950518.htm)

    The sales were made from 1991 to 1993. Two of Merz's associates,
    Manfred Felber, an Austrian, and Luciano Moscatelli, an Australian,
    were also named in the presidential directive. It also listed several
    companies that the three owned, or which were connected with them.
    One of them, Mainway International, was registered in Bad Homburg,
    Germany, and in Hong Kong. According to the order, the three men and
    their companies were being blacklisted along with others who had
    violated the American and international embargo on trading with Iran
    in general, and in chemical warfare (CW) equipment, in particular.
    The order bars Americans from doing business with people and
    companies who are on the blacklist.

    Neither the order nor the involvement of the three generated serious
    interest in the international media, and so the subject did not come
    up on the public agenda. Not in Germany, not in Austria, not in
    Australia and not in the U.S. It was only four years later than an
    investigative report in Haaretz (January 1999) exposed the details of
    the sale of CW equipment to Iran. Surprisingly, it turned out that an
    Israeli businessman, Moshe Regev (Regenstreich) was also associated
    with the group.

    Regev served in the Israel Defense Forces as a munitions man in an
    armored brigade and was discharged with the rank of major after the
    1973 Yom Kippur War. In the 1970s he tried his hand at several
    businesses, notably in diamonds and trading in gold. The businesses
    foundered, the debts accumulated (to the First International Bank,
    among others) and Regev left Israel. He went to Germany and then
    Switzerland, and got into trouble in both countries as he was
    suspected of committing acts of fraud and deceit. While abroad he met
    Merz and Felber, and together with them registered Mainway
    International. That is the company which, according to Clinton's
    executive order, supplied Iran with CW materials that were acquired
    in China.

    The Haaretz investigation turned up additional details. It emerged
    that Merz, Felber (who is married to an Iranian woman) and Regev
    maintained ties with an Iranian acquisition network headed by Dr.
    Majid Abbaspour. Abbaspour was head of Unit 105 in the Iranian
    Defense Ministry and was responsible for its missile and CW program.
    He was also the liaison, meeting several times in Vienna not only
    with Merz and Felber, but also with Israeli businessman Nahum Manbar.

    Both on the blacklist

    It is hard to ignore the similarities between the Manbar affair and
    the deals made by Merz, Felber and Regev. Both groups, that of Manbar
    and his aides (who later testified against him), Brigadier General
    Amos Kotzer and Doran Lichtman, and that of Merz, purchased chemicals
    in China. Both groups met with Abbaspour in Vienna and elsewhere in
    Europe. Both were placed on the U.S. State Department blacklist,
    which was draw up in part on the basis of intelligence information.
    The 1999 article in Haaretz asked why, in that case, Manbar had been
    arrested and sentenced by an Israeli court to 16 years in prison for
    security offenses, whereas no action was taken against Regev (who was
    also apparently an Israeli citizen).

    After the article appeared, Regev called at his initiative from the
    U.S. and vehemently denied the suspicion that he had been involved in
    selling chemicals to Iran. He related that Felber and Merz had
    proposed that he sell Iran telephones and that he had taken them up
    on the offer. But Regev added another interesting detail: He revealed
    in the interview that he had reported to the security authorities
    (probably the Defense Ministry and the Shin Bet security service)
    about his contacts with the Iranians.

    That detail also recalled Manbar's story. During his dealings with
    Iran, Manbar met from time to time with a Shin Bet agent and told him
    about his ties with the Iranians, though in his trial in 1997, it
    turned out that he had not reported everything he knew or the full
    scope of his deals. In reaction to the publication of Regev's account
    in Haaretz, official spokesmen of the Defense Ministry and the Prime
    Minister's Office denied knowing Regev or knowing about his
    activities and the operations of Mainway International.

    In the six years since the article appeared, Regev-Regenstreich
    continued to get into trouble and commit offenses. He was arrested in
    South Africa on suspicion of committing acts of fraud. The German
    prosecutor Reinhard Hubner said this week in a phone call from his
    office in Giessen that he had dealt with Regev's case. In 2002, he
    said, Regev was extradited from Switzerland to Germany, where he was
    wanted on suspicion of having committed fraud. In Germany he was
    incarcerated until the end of his trial. A court in the city of
    Friedberg in the State of Hessen found Regev guilty of committing
    acts of fraud.

    According to the indictment, he fraudulently pocketed money through a
    company and a hotel he owned. He was given a two-year suspended
    sentence and released. Since then he has disappeared and this week
    could not be located. As far as is known, there was no connection
    between the deeds of Gerhard Merz in Equatorial Guinea and his former
    partner Moshe Regev.

    International intrigue

    Until a few years ago, Equatorial Guinea was one of the most remote
    places in Africa. It lies in West Africa, between Cameroon and Gabon,
    and consists of a stretch of coast and five inhabited islands;
    Malabo, the capital, is located on the largest of the islands. The
    country has an area of 28,000 square kilometers and a population of
    about 500,000. For 190 years Equatorial Guinea was a Spanish colony,
    gaining independence in 1968. Since then it has been ruled by two
    relatives, an uncle and his nephew, each of whom in turn is
    considered corrupt and responsible for serial human rights abuses.

    At Christmas 1975, the first president, Francisco Masias Nguema,
    ordered his militia to arrest 150 of his rivals. They were taken to
    the stadium in Malabo and massacred while in the background, the song
    "Those Were the Days" blared from loudspeakers. Under Nguema's
    despotic terror regime, a third of the country's inhabitants were
    either killed or fled, and lived as refugees in neighboring
    countries.

    In 1979 the president was arrested and executed by order of his
    nephew, Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, the current president. On
    paper, the country has a democratic constitution, and the nephew, who
    seized power, saw to it that the existence of at least a semblance of
    democracy was apparent. He was elected three times to seven-year
    terms. In the last elections, in 2002, he won a majority of 97.1
    percent (the opposition candidates withdrew, fearing fraud). However,
    international human rights organizations such as Amnesty
    International and Human Rights Watch say that the country is
    languishing under a tyrannical regime accompanied by a personality
    cult.

    According to reports of such groups, Equatorial Guinea is rife with
    acts of killing, mass arrest and torture of prisoners. There are no
    newspapers in the country and the only radio station is under the
    direct control of the president. Two years ago, an announcer on the
    radio station described the president as "the country's god" and
    added that he was in constant communication with "Almighty God" and
    hears his voice. A presidential aide explained that Obiang "can
    decide to kill anyone without explanation and without being sent to
    hell, because he acts at the guidance of God himself."

    Equatorial Guinea might have continued to be far from the world's eye
    and heart, had it not been for the discovery of oil there. In Africa,
    only Nigeria and Angola have larger oil reserves. Since the
    discovery, the world's attitude toward Equatorial Guinea - or, more
    accurately, the attitude of the multinational oil companies and the
    governments behind them - has changed. TotalFinaElf of France,
    Patronas of Malaysia, Energy Africa of South Africa, and the American
    firms Exxon Mobil, Marathon Oil and Chevron Texaco hurried to win a
    stake in the new bonanza. To date they have invested some $5 billion
    to develop the oil fields. In return they received generous
    franchises that give them control and handsome profits.

    No such profits reach the country's inhabitants, though. They
    continue to subsist in abject poverty and to die young. Their average
    income, according to a World Bank report, is $2 a day; their average
    lifespan is 49 years. The money flows into the deep pockets of
    President Obiang and a few hundreds of his relatives, ministers,
    police officers and other cronies. About six months ago, a
    subcommittee of the U.S. Senate discovered that the Washington-based
    Riggs Bank was used to launder money for the president and his close
    circle. Accounts totaling $700 million were found in their name in
    the bank.

    The sudden wealth has also made Equatorial Guinea a hothouse of
    international intrigue. The president's opponents have established a
    government-in-exile in Spain. In 1998, 2002 and last month, three
    failed coup attempts were mounted. The trials of two of the groups
    that were arrested in March, in Zim babwe and in Equatorial Guinea,
    turned up details that might have come from "The Dogs of War," the
    novel by the British journalist and writer Frederick Forsyth, which
    was published more than 30 years ago. The novel is about a group of
    European mercenaries operating in Africa on a mission for British
    businessmen, with the aim of toppling the government in a fictitious
    country rich in natural resources. The goal of the businessmen, who
    are well connected to the political and economic elite in Britain, is
    to seize control of the country's platinum mines.

    Forsyth spent time in Equatorial Guinea while researching the book,
    and there is no doubt that he had the country in mind when he wrote
    his best-seller. The image of the country that Forsyth created has
    haunted it for years. After the abortive coup of 1998, it was enough
    for a tourist to be found with a copy of the book for him to be
    arrested on suspicion of plotting to topple the government.

    Forsyth foresaw the future. As in his novel, most of the detainees in
    the latest coup attempt are former military personnel with rich
    combat experience. They have ties with British businessmen, bankers
    and politicians. The only difference is that instead of platinum,
    they are lured by the oil of Equatorial Guinea.

    Private army

    The leader of the group of rebels who were apprehended in Equatorial
    Guinea is Nick du Toit, an arms dealer and former member of an elite
    unit in the South African army. In his trial he revealed that the
    coup attempt was organized by Severo Moto, an opposition leader
    living in exile, who found asylum in Spain. The court sentenced Moto
    in absentia to a lengthy prison term. Du Toit, who is in his
    thirties, stated in his defense that his role in the conspiracy was
    limited and included only recruiting the manpower, obtaining weapons
    and coordinating the plot. The prosecutor, however, was not persuaded
    and did not hesitate to brand du Toit a "dog of war."

    Du Toit, who has lost 30 kilograms since his arrest, alleged that he
    had been tortured during his interrogation and that his "confessions"
    were extracted under duress. In his testimony he related that the
    commander of the plotters was Simon Mann, who was one of those
    arrested in Zimbabwe. For the past decade Mann has been a household
    name in the realm of schemes and coups in Africa and in the Third
    World as a whole. He is one of three British associates who have
    created a kind of "label" for themselves in the coup department. The
    three - Mann, Tony Buckingham and Tim Spicer - can take credit for
    trying to "launder" the term "mercenaries" so as to rid it of its
    pejorative connotations.

    Lieutenant Colonel Tim Spicer, now in his fifties, was an English
    "flower child" who came to the U.S. and took part in demonstrations
    against the Vietnam War. Returning to England, he joined the elite
    SAS unit (Special Air Service), which was established in World War II
    by Colonel David Stirling in order to operate behind enemy lines. To
    this day the unit is a role model for the special forces in many
    armies. The founder of Israel's elite Sayeret Matkal unit, Avraham
    Arnan, was deeply influenced by the SAS and its exploits.

    During his service in the unit, on behalf of the British government,
    Spicer was part of the team that protected Sultan Kabous, of Oman. In
    the 1970s the sultan was aided by British troops in suppressing a
    left-wing uprising in the province of Dofar. Some time later, Spicer
    was assigned to the headquarters of the Special Forces, where he
    became acquainted at first-hand with the interface between the world
    of special military operations and the world of shadow diplomacy.
    Afterward he was transferred to service in another elite unit: the
    Scots Guards. Its historic role is to protect the queen when she is
    in London, but in practice it is a military unit that is well trained
    for special operations.

    In the Scots Guards, Spicer met his accomplice in arms and future
    business, Simon Mann, scion of a wealth family of beer brewers. Mann
    attended Eton, a school that is a breeding ground for the political,
    military and economic elites of Britain. At the conclusion of his
    studies, he, like Spicer, volunteered for the SAS. During their
    service in the unit, Spicer and Mann were stationed in Northern
    Ireland. The unit's mission was to fight against the terrorist
    organizations of the Catholics and the Protestants alike. In 1992, a
    squad from the unit under Spicer's direct command was involved in a
    controversial incident, which resulted in the killing of Peter
    McBride, a young Catholic. Allegations continue to be made that the
    unit violated the rules of engagement in the incident.

    After completing their military service, the two opened and shut
    several businesses where they marketed the only commodity in which
    they were skilled: military know-how and special operations. In 1995
    they met Tony Buckingham. Like them, he was a former fighter in a
    special unit of the British Army - the SBS (Special Boat Service),
    the British Navy's commando force. Like them, he was plugged into the
    political establishment and numbered among his friends senior figures
    in the Conservative Party, as well as David Steele, the leader of the
    Liberal Party (which merged with the Social Democrat Party), who was
    on the board of directors of one Buckingham's companies.

    Buckingham's initial steps in business were modest. At the beginning
    of the 1990s he worked as a diver on oil rigs in the North Sea. He
    then set up his own company, Heritage Oil, which operated oilfields
    in Angola. In 1993, when rebels from the UNITA movement led by Jonas
    Savimbi seized the company's oil facilities, Buckingham realized that
    he needed security. To that end he forged ties with Executive
    Outcomes, a private security company owned by former members of top
    units in the South African army, who were left idle following the
    collapse of the apartheid regime.

    Instead of the dirty missions against the blacks (especially the
    liquidation of opponents of the regime), the company's officials, all
    of them skilled former soldiers, began to carry out special
    operations for Tony Buckingham.

    At first this was in the service of the Angolan government's oil
    business, but the company very quickly gained fame in other regions
    of the continent. Apart from securing oilfields, the firm also
    supplied guard services for diamond and gold mines in Congo and
    Sierra Leone. It was in Sierra Leone that the company employed Nick
    du Toit.

    That activity paved the way for the group to supply a "private army"
    to the governments of Rwanda and Burundi. Their operations were also
    convenient for the British government. The vestiges of the colonial
    tradition, in which the government draws on the aid of private
    entrepreneurs to advance its interests, continue to exist. The
    company's activity in Africa served salient interests of the City,
    the British business community. Secret reports of British
    intelligence revealed the close ties between MI6, the secret service,
    and the trio.

    The trio's employers in Africa were governments, but governments of
    dubious reputation that were engaged in civil wars or other
    conflicts. Providing security for mines sometimes entails supplying
    mercenaries to protect the head of state. Nor was the company choosy
    about its clients. In 1995, for example, Tony Buckingham flew to
    Baghdad and met with Saddam Hussein's oil minister.

    Coup attempt

    The media began to take an interest in the company and the ground
    began to burn beneath the feet of the three. Buckingham realized that
    it was time to change direction, or at least image. The three met in
    October 1996 in an Italian restaurant in London, in Chelsea, not far
    from Kings Road, where the company's offices were located. In the
    meeting they formulated a new strategy. They reached the conclusion
    that Executive Outcomes had become more of a liability than an asset;
    they decided to repackage their product and offer the world a new
    concept. The term "mercenaries" would be replaced by a more sterile
    name - Private Military Companies (PMC). What they were doing is
    privatizing military services. Executive Outcomes was shut down and
    in its place arose a new firm, Sandline International.

    The group's next operation took place at the other end of the world.
    In 1997, the government of Papua New Guinea hired the services of
    Sandline. The official purpose was to suppress a revolt that had
    broken out on the island of Bougainville. The true goal, though, was
    to open the copper mine on the island, which the rebels had seized
    and shut down. Behind this plan was not only the legitimate
    government of Papua New Guinea, but also Australian and British
    businessmen with interests in the mine.

    The operation failed already at the airport, even before it got off
    the ground, so to speak. The Australian Air Force intercepted a
    Soviet-made Antonov transport aircraft on which were found
    helicopters and weapons earmarked for Sandline's mercenaries. The
    investigators discovered that the plane had been leased by Spicer. He
    was arrested and charged with illegal possession of arms, but was
    released under pressure from the government of Tony Blair, which had
    good reasons to keep the affair secret.

    Spicer returned to London and continued to operate without
    interference in Sierra Leone and other African countries. In the past
    year his name resurfaced. He had in the meantime left Sandline and
    now, through another of his companies, Aegis Defense Service, he won
    a $300-million contract from the Pentagon to supply security services
    in Iraq. Spicer employs about 20,000 security guards, many of them
    South Africans, who provide auxiliary services for the U.S. armed
    forces and the Iraqi government. Recently, the parents of Peter
    McBride - the Irish youngster who was shot by the Scots Guards - with
    the help of the Irish lobby in Washington, have been trying to get
    Spicer's contract annulled because of his responsibility for their
    son's death.

    As though the labyrinthine exploits of Buckingham, Mann and Spicer
    were not enough, the failed coup in Equatorial Guinea turned up an
    even more famous name: Sir Mark Thatcher. In August 2004, about five
    months after the conspirators were arrested, the South African police
    detained the son of Margaret Thatcher, the former prime minister of
    Britain. The arrest was made at the request of the Equatorial Guinea
    authorities, who maintain that Thatcher was involved in financing the
    coup attempt.

    As a young man, Thatcher, 51, was a racecar driver and afterward a
    failed businessman. In the 1980s, when his mother, the "Iron Lady,"
    was prime minister, the pampered son tried to exploit the family name
    to promote his business. Among other projects, he represented British
    firms in arms deals in Oman and Saudi Arabia, pocketing millions in
    commissions and becoming a wealthy man. In 1984, under mounting
    criticism that he was taking advantage of his family connections to
    make easy profits, Mark Thatcher left Britain for the U.S. There he
    became entangled in a failed transaction and moved to South Africa.

    After a few court hearings in Cape Town, in which Thatcher pleaded
    his innocence, he was released on bail and placed under house arrest.
    The bail bond, in the amount of $330,000, was posted by his mother,
    the former prime minister. The government of Equatorial Guinea
    demanded that South Africa extradite Thatcher, but behind the scenes,
    with the intercession of senior personages from South Africa and
    Britain, a plea bargain was worked out. In January 2005, Mark
    Thatcher appeared in court again, but this time pleased guilty to
    lesser charges. He was convicted on the basis of his confession of
    violating laws against the activity of "mercenaries" in South Africa.
    The court accepted the plea bargain, sentenced Thatcher to pay a fine
    of $500,000, and ordered him released.

    While Thatcher's case was being heard in court, a court in Harare
    sentenced Simon Mann to seven years in prison. In January 2005, the
    Supreme Court of Zimbabwe reduced the sentence to four years. The
    British and South African media have published a few fantasy-like
    articles about a daring prison-break operation at the initiative of
    Buckingham and Spicer, which could outdo even the juicy descriptions
    of Frederick Forsyth.
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