[NYTr] Fisk: Do you know the truth about Lockerbie?
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Oct 15 16:18:33 EDT 2007
The Independent - Oct 13, 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/fisk/article3055834.ece
Fisk: Do you know the truth about Lockerbie?
I urge anyone who is aware of government lies
over Flight 103 to come forward
After writing about the "ravers" who regularly turn up at lectures to
claim that President Bush/the CIA/the Pentagon/Mossad etc perpetrated
the crimes against humanity of 11 September, I received a letter this
week from Marion Irvine, who feared that members of her family run the
risk of being just such "ravers" and "voices heard in the wilderness".
Far from it.
For Mrs Irvine was writing about Lockerbie, and, like her, I believe
there are many dark and sinister corners to this atrocity. I'm not at
all certain that the CIA did not have a scam drugs heist on board and I
am not at all sure that the diminutive Libyan agent Megrahi –
ultimately convicted on the evidence of the memory of a Maltese tailor
– really arranged to plant the bomb on board Pan Am Flight 103 in
December 1988.
But I take Mrs Irvine's letter doubly seriously because her brother,
Bill Cadman, was on board 103 and died in the night over Lockerbie 19
years ago. He was a sound engineer in London and Paris, travelling with
his girlfriend Sophie – who, of course, was also killed – to spend
Christmas with Sophie's aunt in the United States. Nothing, therefore,
could be more eloquent than Mrs Irvine's own letter, which I must quote
to you. She strongly doubts, she says, Libya's involvement in the
bombing.
"We have felt since the first days in December 1988," she writes, "that
something was being hidden from us ... the discrediting of the Helsinki
(US embassy) warning, the presence of the CIA on Scottish soil before
the work of identifying bodies was properly undertaken, the Teflon
behaviour of ministers and government all contributed to a deep feeling
of unease.
"This reached a peak when my father was told by a member of the
American Presidential Commission on Aviation Security and Terrorism
that our government knew what had happened but that the truth would not
come out. In the truth vacuum, the worst-case scenario – that lives
were sacrificed in expiation for the Iranian lives lost in June 1988 –
takes on a certain degree of credibility. The plane was brought down in
the last dangerous moments of the Reagan presidency."
Now I should explain here that the Iranian lives to which Mrs Irvine
refers were the Iranian passengers of an Airbus civilian airliner shot
down over the Gulf by a US warship a few months before Lockerbie and
before the end of the eight-year Iran-Iraq war.
The USS Vincennes – nicknamed Robocruiser by the crews of other
American vessels – blasted its missiles at the Airbus on the assumption
that it was a diving Iranian air force jet. It wasn't – and the Airbus
was climbing – but Reagan, after a few cursory apologies, blamed Iran
for the slaughter, because it had refused to accept a UN ceasefire in
the war with Iraq in which we were backing our old friend Saddam
Hussein (yes, the same!).
The US navy also awarded medals – god spare us – to the captain of the
Vincennes and to his gunnery crew. Some weeks later the boss of the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command – a
pro-Iranian Palestinian outfit in Lebanon – suddenly called a press
conference in Beirut to deny to astonished reporters that he was
involved in Lockerbie.
Why? Was he being fingered? Was Iran? Only later did those familiar
"official sources" who had initially pointed the finger at Iran start
blaming Libya. By then we needed the support of Iran's ally Syria and
Iranian quiescence in our attempt to liberate Kuwait after Saddam's
1990 invasion. Personally, I always thought that Lockerbie was revenge
for the Airbus destruction – the PLP's strange press conference lends
credence to this – which makes sense of Mrs Irvine's courageous letter.
Her parents, Martin and Rita Cadman, have, she says, had countless
meetings with MPs, including Tam Dalyell and Henry Bellingham, Cecil
Parkinson, Robin Cook and Tony Blair, and with Nelson Mandela (whose
appeal for Megrahi to be transferred to a Libyan prison was supported
by the Cadmans).
In a poignant sentence, Mrs Irvine adds that her parents "are ageing
and in their anxiety that they will die with no one having taken real
responsibility for their son's death are in danger of losing focus and
feeling that they themselves are 'raving'. The (1980-88) war in Iraq
meant that no lessons were being learned, and because my brother
chanced to be on that plane we all now feel a heightened sense of
responsibility for the world situation".
Then Mrs Irvine comes to the point. "What can we do? Now that my father
is older and it is up to us, the next generation, to try to needle the
government, but is there any hope? I am writing to ask if you think
there is any reasonable action that we can take that has a slight
prospect of success ... a refusal to understand and admit to the past
is dangerous for the future."
I couldn't put it better myself – and I do have a very direct idea. If
official untruths were told about Lockerbie – if skulduggery was
covered up by the British and US governments and lies were told by
those responsible for our security – then many in authority know about
this.
I urge all those who may know of any such lies to write to me (snail
mail or hand-delivered) at The Independent. They can address their
letters to Mrs Irvine in an envelope with my name on it. In other
words, this is an appeal for honest whistle-blowers to tell the truth.
I can hear already the rustle of the lads in blue. Are we encouraging
civil servants to break the Official Secrets Act? Certainly not. If
lies were told, then officials should let us know, since the Official
Secrets Act – in this case – would have been shamefully misused to keep
them silent. If the truth has indeed been told, then no one is going to
break the Official Secrets Act.
So I await news. Ravers need not apply. But those who know truths which
cannot be told can have the honour of revealing them all. It's the
least Martin and Rita Cadman and Mrs Irvine – and Bill and Sophie –
deserve. As for a constabulary which just might be tempted to threaten
me – or Mrs Irvine – in a quest for truth, to hell with them.
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