The Wilson
plots
Robin Ramsay
The Wilson plots is a portmanteau term for a collection of
fragments of knowledge about intelligence operations against the Labour
governments of Harold Wilson and a great many other people and organisations.
The Wilson plots are about a good deal more than Harold Wilson
and his governments.
The British state and the secret state had never trusted the
British left and had always worked to undermine it. The Attlee government
came out of the war-time coalition and was considered mostly safe and
reliable by the state: and by safe and reliable I mean it did not seek
to challenge either the power of the state nor the assumptions about the
importance of finance capital, the British empire and Britains role
as world power which underpinned it.
Harold Wilson, a most conservative man, made one large mistake while a
young man as far as the state was concerned: he was not sufficiently anti-Soviet.
During the 1940s and 50s, while many of his Labour colleagues were accepting
freebies from the Americans and going to the United States for nice holidays,
Wilson was travelling east fixing trade deals with the Soviet Union. He
was perceived by the secret state by some sections of the secret
state, notably but not exclusively, sections of MI5 to be someone
who, in the words of the General Sir Walter Walker, digs with the
wrong foot.
In short,Wilson was perceived by some to be a dangerous lefty and his
arrival as leader of the Labour Party was thought by some of the professionally
paranoid Cold Warriors in the British and American secret states to be
deeply suspicious. Wilson had been to the Soviet Union many times: was
he a KGB agent, they wondered? Had he been entrapped and blackmailed?
Asking that question was enough for MI5 to begin obsessively investigating
Wilson and his colleagues and friends. Nothing was found. But to the professional
paranoids, nothing found simply suggested it was better hidden than they
first thought. And so they carried on. Meanwhile, the left in Britain
was on the rise: trade unions got more powerful. The professional paranoids,
noting the influence of the Communist Party of Great Britain in some trade
unions, began to see the shift left-wards in the UK in the sixties and
early 1970s as somehow under Soviet control. In 1974 Conservative Prime
Minister Heath had his fateful show-down with the miners union and
lost and the Tory right and their friends in the secret state began
a series of operations to prevent what they believed or pretended
to believe was an imminent left revolution in Britain. Some of these
operations were done by the secret state; some by people close to but
not in the secret state. Bits of the CIA also shared this view and got
involved. The South African intelligence service (BOSS) was running parallel
operations against Labour and Liberal politicians it perceived as South
Africas enemies, notably the Liberal leader Jeremy Thorpe and the
then leader of the Young Liberals, now the Labour MP, Peter Hain. It is
worth noting here that similar operations were being run in this period
against mild, reformist, leftish parties in New Zealand, Australia, Germany,
in Canada against the Quebec separatists, and, most famously, in Chile.
This extraordinarily complex period of British history saw covert operations
of one sort or another involving serving or former personnel from MI5,
MI6, the CIA, Ministry of Defence and the Information Research Department,
plus assets in the media and the trade unions, plus allies in the Conservative
Party and the City. That it tends to get summarised as MI5 plots
against Wilson is due to the way the information about these areas
emerged in 1986-88, through former Army Information Officer, Colin Wallace,
and the former MI5 officer, Peter Wright. They both talked about MI5 as
the source of plotting against Wilson (though Wallaces allegations
were much wider than that) and for much of the left-liberal media and
politicians in this country this fitted straight into their vague understanding
of the intelligence services and British domestic history which told them
that the bad guys were MI5. By the time we had educated ourselves sufficiently
to understand what Wallace and Wright were saying, the perception the
false perception that the story was just MI5 plotting against the
Labour government had been established.
The Pencourt Investigation
It is largely now forgotten that the first attempt to get the Wilson
plots story going was made by Wilson himself.
Wilson was aware of the various attempts to get the media to run smear
stories about him and his circle, and aware of the stream of burglaries
afflicting himself, his personal staff and other Labour Party figures
in the 1974-76 period. But he chose to do nothing in public while he was
in office. In private he tried to get the Cabinet Secretary, Sir John
Hunt, to do something, though quite what Hunt did is still unknown.
It seems clear now that Wilson did nothing publicly for four reasons.
The first was that he didnt have anything substantial to goon merely
suspicions and a lot of little whispy bits and pieces of rumours and tip-offs.
The second reason for his inaction was his distrust of MI5. Had Wilson
instructed Whitehall to do an inquiry, it would have turned to MI5; and
it was MI5 that Wilson and his personal secretary, Marcia Williams, suspected
of being at the root of their troubles. The third reason Wilson did nothing
while in office was his knowledge in 1974 when he won the election, that
he would only serve two more years and quit. Wilson, we now know, was
afraid of Alzheimers disease: it had afflicted his father and he
told his inner circle in 1974 that he was going to resign in 1976 when
he was 60. In 1975/6 ensuring a smooth hand-over of power to his successor
and Labour was a minority government, dont forget was
a much greater priority than finding out who was behind the burglaries
of his offices and the rumours about him. Wilson was a loyal member of
the Labour Party to whom he owed everything. He didnt want to make
bad publicity for the party and his successor. And the fourth reason
Wilson did nothing was his memory of the previous time he had tried. In
his first term in office, encouraged by George Wigg MP, he had tried taking
on the Whitehall security establishment in the so-called D-notice Affair
and had got his fingers badly burned.
As far as we know Wilson had very little real, concrete information about
what was going on in 1976 when he retired. He knew that he and his circle
were being repeatedly burgled. He had watched the campaign being run against
Jeremy Thorpe, the leader of the Liberal Party, by BOSS, and that is why
he made his first public remarks not about MI5, the objects of his real
suspicions, but about BOSS. But those comments produced all the negative
reactions he feared not surprisingly, since he had almost no evidence
and he let it drop until he resigned.
He then waited a couple of months and contacted two journalists, Barry
Penrose and Roger Courtiour (who became mockingly titled Pencourt)
gave them the little he had and hoped for the best. But without any decent
leads into the MI5 material, Pencourt stumbled or were led: it isnt
clear which into the story being run by BOSS of Liberal leader Jeremy
Thorpe and his brief affair with Norman Scott not the story of MI5s
campaign against Wilson. There was a brief flurry of interest by the media,
notably by the Observer which had paid a lot of money for the serialisation
rights to the Pencourt book, but nothing happened and the story disappeared.
Wilson tried to get his successor James Callaghan to do something but
Callaghan declined.
The story disappeared for two reasons. The only journalists or politicians
in the late 1970s who knew anything about the secret state were currently
or formerly employed by the secret state or were mouthpieces for it. There
was no investigative journalism in 1978 in the UK worth mentioning; there
were no former British intelligence officers to show journalists the way;
there were no whistle-blowers, no renegades. There were no courses being
taught in universities. There were almost no books to read. In 1978 the
British secret state was, really was, still secret.
After the failure of the Pencourt investigation nothing happened for five
years. Harold Wilson became a Lord, presided over a long inquiry into
the City of London which was consigned to the recycle bin as soon as it
was published, and duly developed Alzheimers as he suspected he
would. His personal assistant for 30 years, Marcia Williams, became Lady
Faulkender and has said nothing of consequence since. Barry Penrose and
Roger Courtiour made a lot of money. Penrose was last seen working for
the Express, telling lies for the British state about Northern Ireland.
Courtiour is in the BBC somewhere.
Colin Wallace & Peter Wright
By 1979 the extraordinary events of the 1974-76 period events which
included The Times seriously discussing the right conditions for a military
coup in the UK, and a considerable chunk of the British establishment
wondering if the Prime Minister was a KGB agent had just slipped
by, unexamined. In came Mrs Thatcher with her GCSE understanding of economics
and proceeded to wreck the British economy, creating 2 million unemployed
in 18 months, and the entire story or group of stories we know as
the Wilson plots simply ceased to be of interest to all but a handful
of people.
One of that handful was Colin Wallace, who in 1980 began a ten year sentence
for a manslaughter he didnt commit. Wallace was interested in the
Wilson plots story because he had not only been a minor participant in
the plots, and had knowledge of other areas of secret activities, he knew
he was in prison to stop him talking about them. The other interested
party was the former MI5 officer, Peter Wright. He had also been a participant
in the plots and had also been maltreated by his erstwhile employers in
the secret state. Not framed and imprisoned like Wallace, but denied a
decent pension on a technicality after a lifetimes service to the
state.
Here is one of the outstanding lessons of this episode. The British secret
state is an astonishingly inept employer of people. None of those who
became well known whistle blowers in the 1980s and 90s, Wright and Wallace,
John Stalker, Captain Fred Holroyd, Cathy Massiter, David Shayler and
Richard Tomlinson wanted to be whistle-blowers. They were converted into
whistle-blowers by the stupidity of their employers in the state. Wallace,
Holroyd and Wright, for example, were loyal Queen and Country men to a
fault, right-wingers through and through. Unfortunately, our secret state
has only one response to internal dissent or the possibility of public
revelation of its own errors: smash, crush, smear, destroy, frame, cover-up
and lie. The secret state perceives itself to be defending the national
interest and in the national interest anything is permitted.
In prison in the 1980s Colin Wallace began writing letters about his wrongful
conviction and accounts of his experiences working for the British Armys
psychological warfare operation in Northern Ireland. In that capacity
he had witnessed some of MI5s attempts to smear Wilson and other
politicians as communists, drug-takers, homosexuals etc. The major media
took no notice. Duncan Campbell at the New Statesman, did take notice
but had an enormous amount on his agenda and did nothing. So Wallace ended
up working with me instead.
Despite Wallaces allegations made while in prison and published
by me in Lobster and distributed all over the British media in the months
preceding his release from prison, the media took almost no notice. They
only sat up and paid attention when the first rumours about a book being
published in Australia by a former MI5 officer called Peter Wright began
circulating in the UK. One nut-case talking about the Wilson plots could
be ignored; two, apparently, could not.
We now know, from a senior civil servant called Clive Ponting another
whistle-blower in the 1980s that in the months before Wallaces
release from prison, the Ministry of Defence set up a committee, with
MI5, to deal with him. It is worth noting here that this committee did
not simply order his murder. Outside Northern Ireland our secret state
seems to kill people very rarely. But it is also worth noting that the
committee was was set up to pervert the course of justice. Precisely what
this committee did is not known, but its general remit was to discredit
Wallace and so discredit his allegations. Two of its operations were detected
and they show what can be done with unaccountable power.
By mid 1987 despite the huge amount of space devoted to the allegations
filtered back from Australia from the Peter Wright book, Spycatcher, there
were only three groups of journalists actually trying to research the
complex tales Wallace told: Channel Four News, where I was briefly; David
Leigh and Paul Lashmar at the Observer;and, a bit later, Paul Foot at
the Mirror. Other journalists dropped in and out, did odd stories, but
only those three groups were seriously at it. We all had the same basic
problem: Wallace had been described as a Walter Mitty by Ministry
of Defence briefings during his trial in 1980 and the Ministry of Defence
was simply denying that Wallace had the job he said he did in Northern
Ireland. Wallace claimed to have had access to secret intelligence material
in his capacity as a psy-ops officer for the British Army. Since the psyops/
war unit was officially deniable, i.e. officially didnt exist, the
MOD line was that Wallace was simply a press officer his official,
public role and the rest was fantasies. We were trying to establish
the veracity not only of his claims about events but also his claims about
his own CV.
The jumping log book
Wallace was a sky-diving enthusiast and eventually the Army in Northern
Ireland began including sky-diving in its psychological operations. Wallace
formed a free-fall team which did displays all over Northern Ireland and
was used to try to create positive feelings about the Army basic
hearts and minds stuff. Wallaces speciality was descending dressed
as Santa Claus and giving out presents to kids. Sky-diving in this country
is very tightly controlled: every jump is recorded by the British Parachuting
Association. As you do more jumps you get differing kinds of licenses:
beginners, intermediate, advanced. Wallace had an advanced, D
license or so he said.
In the summer of 1987 rumours began spreading through this little group
of journalists that Wallaces claims to have been a sky-diver were
a fake. He was a fantasist, a Walter Mitty. These rumours arrived at Channel
Four News via an old colleague of Wallaces who knew an ITN journalist.
The rumours seemed inexplicable at first: we had lots of pictures of Wallace
sky-diving with and without his Santa Claus outfit. But when I finally
rang the British Parachuting Association to check their file on Wallace
I found they had no record of him. Eventually Paul Foot, also working
on the story, discovered that a duplicate set of records were held by
the international parachuting body and Wallaces records were there,
confirming that he was what he said he was as far as sky-diving
went, anyway. Undaunted by this, a journalist now with the BBC called
John Ware, still ran the Wallace-is-a-fake parachuting story
some months later in a double page spread in the Independent smearing
Wallace and Fred Holroyd.
The point here is, we can now work out some of what this MOD-MI5 operation
against Wallace consisted of. First, they picked one area of Wallaces
CV, his parachuting, and set out to discredit him with it. If they could
show he was lying here, they believed, journalists would not believe his
other claims. They burgled his house and stole his jumping log book; they
burgled the British Parachuting Association and removed his file, substituting
a fake file for the one with his number on it. Then they began spreading
the word through their press contacts that Wallace was a fraud, knowing
that Wallace didnt have his jumping log and knowing that eventually
some journalist would ring the British Parachuting Association and
ask about his record. Finding nothing, because his file had been removed,
such a journalist would consider the allegation that he was a fantasist
proven and would thus dismiss him as the Walter Mitty figure
described at his trial. This operation was certainly run at Channel Four
News and John Ware, then working for the BBC. In effect, the MOD tried
to convert Wallace into the Walter Mitty they said he was.
Unfortunately for the MOD, Paul Foot was a better journalist than that
and found the duplicate set. Without Foot we would have been struggling
to rebut the Wallace-is-a fantasist line. Another disinformation project
about Wallace was fed through Professor Paul Wilkinson, then at Aberdeen
University. A former RAF officer, Wilkinson was ITNs official consultant
on terrorism. Somebody in the MOD or MI5 fed him some material about Wallace
which accused him of trying to get a man in Northern Ireland killed so
he Wallace could have the mans wife. This smear story
had been created just before Wallace left Northern Ireland presumably
in case they ever needed to get at Wallace. Wilkinson wrote a letter,
passing this derogatory material on to ITN. Fortunately, by this point,Channel
Four News management were pretty sure Wallace was telling the truth
and showed us journalists Wilkinsons letter. The allegations it
contained were refutable, and Wallace wrote to the University authorities.
Wilkinson was reprimanded and apologised and lost his job as ITNs
consultant on terrorism.
The point here is this: Wallace had already been framed for manslaughter
and convicted in a rigged trial. Having failed to shut Wallace up with
six years of imprisonment, the secret state then set about discrediting
him. If you could get to the people on the MOD/MI5 committee which planned
this and asked them why they were doing it, they would simply say, it
was in the national interest to prevent Wallace talking. In the minds
of the secret state the national interest as defined by them overrides
the competing claims of justice and democracy.
Politicians and the Secret State
I offer these anecdotes by way of introduction to some comments on the
relationship between the media, politicians and what we might call historical
truth. Many people vaguely assume, as I did at the beginning of the Wallace
affair, that politicians and journalists are concerned with the
truth. This simply isnt the case.
Most journalists at least 99% of those I have met are interested
first in their careers, and aims subsidiary to that, such as getting a
story or doing better than their rivals, or having a good time or padding
their expenses. Journalist are just people doing a job. They have mortgages
and families to support; and theirs is now a very insecure business. All
the unions in the media were smashed in the past 15 years. Contracts are
short. You can be fired on the spot.
Politicians, most of them, are simply interested in power or aims subsidiary
to that, such as getting reselected, getting re-elected; pleasing the
whips to get promotion; or simply getting press coverage. The pursuit
of the truth is not on the agenda of most politicians; the pursuit of
the truth, when it means going against prevailing media opinion, or the
wishes of their partys leaders, or the wishes of the state, is on
the agenda of a handful. This is particularly true of stories in the field
of intelligence and security policy. Nothing makes MPs more nervous than
security and intelligence issues.
In the first place, if theyve got half a brain, MPs simply wont
go near subjects about which they are ignorant which is sensible
enough. And to my knowledge other than those who have worked for, or have
been close to, the security and intelligence services, there are no MPs
who have a decent knowledge of this field. Not even Tam Dalyell. In the
second place, MPs all have a healthy respect for the damage to careers
tangling with the spooks can inflict. You might think that MPs then have
a massive vested interested in bringing the security and intelligence
services under their control. But this hasnt happened yet and, in
my view, short of some massive,earth-shaking scandal, never will.
In the House of Commons in 1987 we got some help from Ken Livingstone,
Tam Dalyell and Dale Campbell-Savours. These days Dalyell is still at
it, as is Norman Baker a Lib-Dem MP, a new member of the so-called awkward
squad. Livingstone has moved onto other areas and Campbell-Savours has
become a Blair loyalist.
The British political and media systems are not equipped to deal with
major issues concerning the behaviour of the secret state.
In the political arena the Intelligence and Security Committee setup under
the Tories is a joke, without investigative powers. But it is a joke useful
to the secret state. When the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee
was conducting hearings into the Sierra Leone affair last year it asked
for an interview with the head of MI6. Foreign Secretary Robin Cook denied
them access on the grounds that that the security and Intelligence Committee
was the appropriate forum for such questions. MPs are still unable to
ask questions about the Security and Intelligence services: the House
of Commons Clerks simply will not accept them. The secret state is still,
officially, not accountable to Parliament.
At its heart, the Wilson plots story was the attempt by a handful of people
to persuade the major print and broadcast media and parliament that their
view of the British political universe was false. I was writing articles
which implied: you the media, the politicians do not know
what you are talking about: the world isnt the way you say it is.
At the beginning, before the major media took any real interest in the
Wallace story, this was a peculiarly difficult message to sell. Who was
I to tell experienced journalists they didnt know what was what?
I was on the dole, living in the sticks, in Hull, producing a magazine
with a tiny circulation. In the weeks before Wallace came out of prison
I had circulated a great deal of material to the major media about Wallace,
his case and his explosive allegations. I got only one response, from
a journalist at Newsnight. As big-time journalists are prone to do, he
said, dont tell me over the phone, come down to London. So down
I went to Newsnights office. It was my first exposure to the major
media. I delivered the spiel and the journalist was interested and said
he would take a camera crew down to the prison to interview Wallace when
he got out.
I had been told by Wallace that among the visitors to his secret psy-ops
unit, Information Policy, in Northern Ireland, had been Alan Protheroe,
who at the time of my Newsnight visit, was Assistant Director General
of the BBC. Nicknamed the Colonel in the BBC, Protheroe was,
and may still be, a part-time soldier-cum-intelligence officer, specialising
in military-media relations.
But unlike the journalists I had been talking to up to that point, Protheroe
knew who Wallace was and what the Information Policy unit had been doing
in Northern Ireland. To Newsnight I therefore said something like this:
Protheroes a spook; youll have to watch him. Hell
try and block anything you do with Wallace in it. Really,
old boy, said the BBC people I was talking to, it isnt
like that in the BBC.
Their response was comical, really. It was then only just over a year
since there had been several weeks of intense media interest in the revelation
that the BBC actually had its own in-house MI5 office vetting BBC employees
(still there, as far as I know) prima facie evidence that, au contraire,
the BBC was exactly like that.
The Newsnight journalist, Julian OHallorhan, interviewed Wallace
the day he came out of prison and then had his piece yanked out of a programme
at the very last minute. I was actually watching Newsnight at the time
and saw the confusion in the studio as the running order was rejigged
while they were on air. We subsequently heard that Protheroe had indeed
blocked the Wallace interview, and when asked, the BBC denied that they
had ever interviewed Wallace. (Paul Foot has seen a bootleg of the film-which-didnt-exist.)
Protheroes action in blocking the Wallace interview was reported
four months later in the Sunday Times and has been confirmed since by
a senior Newsnight staffer who has now left the BBC.
Thirteen years later, have things improved? Yes and no. The media is potentially
more difficult to manage for the state than it used to be. The Ministry
of Defence employs 150 press officers to spin-doctor the media and even
MI6 has a media department whose job it is to wine and dine journalists
and editors to get the departmental line across. The days when a quiet
word in the ear of a handful of editors would ensure a media black-out
are gone. And there is a good deal more information available than there
was in 1986 if journalists could be bothered to read it which,
mostly, they cant. But the fundamental attitudes of the media towards
the state and secret state remain the same as far as I am aware. British
journalists and, more importantly British editors, do not
see themselves in an adversarial relationship with the state and secret
state. If the secret state says national security to them,
most journalists and virtually all editors will still back away. And in
some ways the situation today is even worse than it was then. Investigative
journalism is expensive, offers no guarantee of publishable articles,
or broadcastable TV programmes, and there is less of it now than there
was then. There has been a visible dumbing-down of the few TV documentary
series, such as World inAction, into consumerism programmes. Not counting
the journalists who are simply mouthpieces for state, who go under the
titles of diplomatic or defence correspondents, there is currently only
one journalist in the whole of Britain who is seriously interested in
the intelligence and security field, and thats Paul Lashmar at the
Independent.
In 1990, I think it was, a resolution of mine, became the North Hull Labour
Partys conference resolution. It called for a full-scale public
inquiry into Northern Ireland, the dirty war there, the Wallace affair
and the Wilson plots; it called for the introduction of a system of real
parliamentary accountability for the secret state. The resolution went
to the Labour Party conference where it was passed without opposition.
As such, according to the rules of the Party, it became party policy.
Of course nothing happened, the whole thing has been forgotten and we
are where we were in 1986 before the Wilson plots story got going. Short
of a bug being found in Tony and Cherie Blairs bedroom with please
return to MI5 stamped on it, New Labour is not likely to challenge
the secret state and maybe not even then.
Although Britain is a democracy in some senses, the will of the
people has never been extended to cover the key areas of interest
to a state which was developed to run and service an empire. Defence,
foreign policy, security and intelligence policy in none of these
areas can MPs or their constituents have access to official information
or have any input into policy. During both World Wars the state co-opted
the mass media of the day for its propaganda; and this continued to some
extent after the war in the Cold War with the Soviet bloc when large chunks
of the media were co-opted again to run anti-Soviet propaganda this
is what is described in the new Paul Lashmar book about the Information
Research Department; and is presumably the reason it has been so widely
ignored.
At the end of the day, as the cliche has it, its down to the politicians.
As long as the politicians remain content not to have any influence over
foreign and defence affairs and the intelligence agencies which
service them the media will remain relatively impotent and the subject
will remain off the agenda. And, unfortunately, this present intake of
Labour MPs shows every sign of being at least as supine before the state
as those who came before it.
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