Difference between revisions of "Eeben Barlow"

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[[File:Eeben_Barlow.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Lt-Col Eeben Barlow, senior in [[CCB]] and co-founder of [[EO]] ]]
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'''Luther Eeben Barlow''' is the former Europe Director of the shadowy South African [[Civil Co-operation Bureau]] in the 1980s, when he was employed by [[De Beers]] in London and was responsible for setting up front corporations to evade sanctions such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_418 UN Security Council Resolution 418] which imposed a mandatory arms embargo on apartheid South Africa (1977-1994).<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qPe-cfAumzMC&pg=PA65&lpg=PA65&dq=Branch+Energy&source=bl&ots=H1TbZGmWGf&sig=aRkeCLlrMb0pVzjQW_orEeJP0QQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=tdEpU6LzJ8-ihgeYoYDYAw&ved=0CJkBEOgBMA4#v=onepage&q=Branch%20Energy&f=false "Mercenaries: An African Security Dilemma"] page 66</ref>
 
'''Luther Eeben Barlow''' is the former Europe Director of the shadowy South African [[Civil Co-operation Bureau]] in the 1980s, when he was employed by [[De Beers]] in London and was responsible for setting up front corporations to evade sanctions such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_418 UN Security Council Resolution 418] which imposed a mandatory arms embargo on apartheid South Africa (1977-1994).<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=qPe-cfAumzMC&pg=PA65&lpg=PA65&dq=Branch+Energy&source=bl&ots=H1TbZGmWGf&sig=aRkeCLlrMb0pVzjQW_orEeJP0QQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=tdEpU6LzJ8-ihgeYoYDYAw&ved=0CJkBEOgBMA4#v=onepage&q=Branch%20Energy&f=false "Mercenaries: An African Security Dilemma"] page 66</ref>
  

Revision as of 16:40, 3 May 2014

Person.png Eeben Barlow TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Eeben Barlow.jpg
Founder ofExecutive Outcomes, STTEP

Luther Eeben Barlow is the former Europe Director of the shadowy South African Civil Co-operation Bureau in the 1980s, when he was employed by De Beers in London and was responsible for setting up front corporations to evade sanctions such as UN Security Council Resolution 418 which imposed a mandatory arms embargo on apartheid South Africa (1977-1994).[1]

In 1989, Eeben Barlow, a retired Lt-Col in the South African special forces, co-founded with Simon Mann, a former British SAS officer, the private military company (PMC) Executive Outcomes (EO) in South Africa. EO activities, from its founding in 1989 through 1993, escaped the attention of the world media until in the Autumn of 1993 Executive Outcomes (UK) Pty Ltd was registered in London by Eeben Barlow, Tony Buckingham and Simon Mann. From 1994 when EO became involved in Angola and later Papua New Guinea and Sierra Leone, this PMC lost much of its transparency. As a result, EO's activities became increasingly scrutinised by the press, defence researchers, and other concerned parties. With the passage of the new anti-mercenary law in South Africa, EO closed its doors on 1 January 1999, after 10 years' operations, Barlow having ceased to be its Chairman in 1997.[2]

In 2009 Eeben Barlow was appointed Chairman of STTEP International[3] and currently lectures at military colleges and universities in Africa on defence, intelligence and security issues. Prior to 2009, Barlow served as an independent politico-military advisor to several African governments. He is a contributor to The Counter Terrorist magazine.[4]

Civil Co-operation Bureau

While in the CCB, Barlow, who is recognisable by his one green and one blue eye, was assigned to Western Europe. There he was in charge of spreading disinformation against Nelson Mandela's African National Congress (ANC), for example, releasing propaganda in England that the ANC was working with IRA terrorists. He was also responsible for setting up front corporations to evade sanctions and sell South African weapons abroad. During this time, Barlow is suspected to have made many of his corporate world contacts that would later prove useful for EO.[5]

Lockerbie bombing

Eeben Barlow has been accused of carrying out the Lockerbie bombing on the orders of the South African State Security Council under the direction of Craig Williamson.[6]

EO in Sierra Leone

In 1995, Sierra Leone's then-military government hired the South African firm Executive Outcomes to combat rebels in the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). EO was effectively a military battalion for hire – one of the most prominent of a new generation of private military corporations. It brought in a few hundred fighters, most of whom were veterans of the South African army, who drove the RUF out of the major diamond fields and destroyed some of their key jungle strongholds.

While Sierra Leone paid Executive Outcomes to fight the rebels, the government also awarded diamond-mining rights to Branch Energy, a firm linked to EO through cross-ownership among a group of former South African and British military officers. EO thus provided security in Kono, the country's richest diamond region, and Branch Energy mined there.

Executive Outcomes' victory allowed Sierra Leone to hold elections in March 1996 for a civilian government whose president, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, signed a peace accord with the weakened RUF in late 1996. Under the deal, Kabbah ended EO's contract in 1997.[7]

Affiliations

References

  1. "Mercenaries: An African Security Dilemma" page 66
  2. "Executive Outcomes: Mercenary Corporation OSINT Guide" Dr Robert J Bunker and Steven F Marin, July 1999
  3. "@EebenBarlow on Twitter
  4. "Eeben Barlow's Military and Security blog"
  5. Corporate Warriors:The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry, by P.W. Singer, Cornell University Press, 2003, p102.
  6. "Lockerbie: J'accuse....Eeben Barlow"
  7. "Diamond Hunters Fuel Africa’s Brutal Wars"