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Terror devices used by the IRA in a vicious murder campaign in Ulster
blew up British servicemen as the world blamed Iran
Eight British soldiers killed during ambushes in Iraq were the victims
of a highly sophisticated bomb first used by the IRA, The Independent on Sunday
can reveal.
The soldiers, who were targeted by insurgents as they travelled through the
country, died after being attacked with bombs triggered by infra-red beams.
The bombs were developed by the IRA using technology passed on by the security
services in a botched "sting" operation more than a decade ago.
This contradicts the British government's claims that Iran's Revolutionary
Guard is helping Shia insurgents to make the devices.
The Independent on Sunday can also reveal that the bombs and the firing devices
used to kill the soldiers, as well as two private security guards, were initially
created by the UK security services as part of a counter-terrorism strategy
at the height of the troubles in the early 1990s.
According to security sources, the technology for the bombs used in the attacks,
which were developed using technology from photographic flash units, was employed
by the IRA some 15 years ago after Irish terrorists were given advice by British
agents.
"We are seeing technology in Iraq today that it took the IRA 20 years
to develop," said a military intelligence officer with experience in Northern
Ireland.
He revealed that one trigger used in a recent Iraqi bombing was a three-way
device, combining a command wire, a radio signal and an infra-red beam - a technique
perfected by the IRA.
Britain claims that the bomb-making expertise now being used in southern Iraq
was passed on by Iran's Revolutionary Guard through Hizbollah, the revolutionary
Islamist group it sponsors in Lebanon.
But a former agent who infiltrated the IRA told The Independent on Sunday that
the technology reached the Middle East through the IRA's co-operation with Palestinian
groups. In turn, some of these groups used to be sponsored by Saddam Hussein
and his Baath party.
The former agent added: "The photographic flashgun unit was replaced with
infra-red and then coded infra-red, but basically they were variations of the
same device. The technology came from the security forces, but the IRA always
shared its equipment and expertise with Farc guerrillas in Colombia, the Basque
separatists, ETA and Palestinian groups. There is no doubt in my mind that the
technology used to kill our troops in Basra is the same British technology from
a decade ago."
Even more alarming is the claim that the devices were supplied by the security
services to an agent inside the Provisionals as part of a dangerous game of
double bluff.
According to investigators examining past collusion between the security forces
and paramilitaries in Northern Ireland, members of the shadowy army undercover
outfit, the Force Research Unit, and officers from MI5 learned in the early
1990s that a senior IRA member in south Armagh was working to develop bombs
triggered by light beams. They decided the risks would be diminished if they
knew what technology was being used.
"The thinking of the security forces was that if they were intimate with
the technology, then they could develop counter-measures, thereby staying one
step ahead of the IRA," a senior source close to the inquiry explained.
"It may seem absurd that the security services were supplying technology
to the IRA, but the strategy was sound.
"Unfortunately, no one could see back then that this technology would
be used to kill British soldiers thousands of miles away in a different war."
The Provisionals' agent was allowed to travel to New York andpurchase the equipment.
But the strategy backfired in March 1992 when the technology triggered a bomb
that killed a policewoman and mutilated her male colleague near Newry before
counter-measures were in place.
* A dossier naming the alleged killers of the six Red Caps murdered by an Iraqi
mob more than two years ago is being handed over to Iraqi judges this week.
The six members of the Royal Military Police were butchered to death in June
2003 in an Iraqi police station after being attacked by about 300 tribesmen.
* Two mothers of British soldiers killed in Iraq are to stage a 24-hour "peace
camp" opposite Downing Street on Tuesday.