Iraq Victim Was Top-Secret Apartheid Killer
Sunday Times (Johannesburg)
April 18, 2004
Posted to the web April 19, 2004
Julian Rademeyer
Johannesburg
A security contractor killed in Iraq last week was once one of South Africa's most secret covert agents, his identity guarded so closely that even the Truth and Reconciliation Commission did not discover the extent of his involvement in apartheid's silent wars.
Gray Branfield, 55, admitted to being part of a death squad which gunned down Joe Gqabi, the ANC's chief representative and Umkhonto weSizwe operational head in Zimbabwe on July 31 1981. Gqabi was shot 19 times when three assassins ambushed him as he reversed down the driveway of his Harare home.
Author Peter Stiff this week confirmed information that Branfield was an operative identified in his books, The Silent War, Warfare By Other Means and Cry Zimbabwe as "Major Brian". He said Branfield, a former detective inspector in the Rhodesian police force specialising in covert operations against guerrilla organisations, came to South Africa after Zanu-PF came to power in 1980.
In South Africa he joined the SA Defence Force's secret Project Barnacle, a precursor to the notorious Civil Co-operation Bureau (CCB) death squad.
More at url:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200404190944.html
There we go. The quality and skills and character of the
mercenaries that Blackwater and the others are bringing to Iraq.
No wonder...
And no, I can't find it in me to regret this man's death, really. I'm sure that there are mercenaries who have stumbled into the wrong business and aren't utterly loathesome excuses for human beings. But any more like this guy... the Iraqis will be doing the world a service in shooting.