- Projekt-26
Projekt-26, best known as P-26, was a
stay-behind army inSwitzerland charged with countering a possible invasion of the country. The existence of P-26 (along with P-27) as secret intelligence agencies dissimulated in the military intelligence agency (UNA) was revealed in November 1990 by the PUK EMD Parliamentary Commission headed by senator Carlo Schmid. The commission, whose initial aim was to investigate the alleged presence of secret files on citizens constituted in the Swiss Ministry of Defence, was created in March 1990 in the wake of the "Fichenaffäre " or Secret Files Scandal, during which it had been discovered that the federal police, BUPO, had maintained files on 900,000 persons (out of a population of 7 million). [http://www.danieleganser.ch/e/fachzeitschriften/british/index.htm THE BRITISH SECRET SERVICE IN NEUTRAL SWITZERLAND] , Daniele Ganser, in "Intelligence and National Security ", Vol.20, n°4, December 2005, pp.553-580]Since the existence of P-26 was revealed a month after similar revelations made in Italy by the premier
Giulio Andreotti , who disclosed to the Italian Parliament the existence, through-out theCold War , of aGladio stay-behind anti-Communist paramilitary network headed byNATO and present in all of Europe, Switzerland formed a Parliamentary commission charged of investigating alleged links between P-26 and similar stay-behind organizations. It was one of the three countries, along with Belgium and Italy, to create a parliamentary commission on these stay-behind armies.Swiss authorities declared on
November 21 , 1990 the dissolving of P-26, since the clandestine organization operated outside of parliamentary and even governmental control, being an autonomous structure hidden inside the secret military services.Daniel Ganser: [http://www.psa.ac.uk/journals/pdf/5/2005/Ganser.pdf The Secret Side of International Relations: An approach to NATO’s stay-behind armies in Western Europe] , Published in the "Steton Hall Journal of Diplomacy", pages 38-40.]Stay-behind plans during World War II
As the United Kingdom, which had prepared itself for a Nazi invasion during
World War II , which led to the creation of the Home Guard and of stay-behindAuxiliary Units , Switzerland also prepared for such an eventuality, as its neutrality by itself did not constitute a sufficient guarantee against a military offensive ofNazi Germany or Fascist Italy. Thus, GeneralHenri Guisan put in place the "Reduit Concept," according to which the best strategy for the military was to retreat in the highest parts of theAlps and abandon the plains to the enemy. From there, a guerrilla warfare would be launched against the invader.Stay-behind in the Territorial Service
With the end of World War II and the official beginning of the
Cold War , plans were made to prepare for an invasion by theSoviet Union . The PUK EMD Commission headed by Carlo Schmid discovered that a first stay-behind branch was created within the Swiss army in the "Territorialdienst " (Territorial Service). This military branch was considered best suited for this mission, as it was not trained to fight in the front but to carry out domesticpolice operations among the civilian population. However, the PUK EMD Commission was confronted by the destruction of many documents pertaining to these early stay-behind organisations:"The historical record is fragmentary, because almost all documents of the resistance organization of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s were destroyed around 1980." [ Daniele Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.560 ]
The first commander of this secret unit was Divisionär
Franz Wey (1896-1963), who was succeeded by Burger, Amstutz and de Pury. The latter was promoted to Brigadier-General and Chief of the Territorial Service.In December 1956, following the
Suez Crisis and the crushing of theBudapest insurrection ,Erwin Jaeckle asked in Parliament what "preparations can be taken in the fields of organisation and training in order to take up and secure total popular resistance, if necessary also outside the framework of the army." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.560 ] A year later, in September 1957, Defence MinisterPaul Chaudet , successor toKarl Kobelt (both members of the liberal FDP), replied that "The events in Hungary — seen from a military perspective only — have shown that the battle of a resistance movement alone can not be successful." He added that "This battle poses problems of a political and military nature, as well as juridical concerns in the context ofinternational law and the conventions that we have signed." Finally, Claudet declared that "Although certain measures have been envisaged by the Territorial Service in this area, the possibilities in this field are limited." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.560 ]Swiss Major
Hans von Dach published in 1958 "Der totale Widerstand, Kleinkriegsanleitung für jedermann" ("Total Resistance," Bienne, 1958) concerning guerrilla warfare, a book of 180 pages about passive and active resistance to a foreign invasion, including detailed instructions on sabotage, clandestinity, methods to dissimulate weapons, struggle against police moles, etc. [ MajorHans von Dach , 1958. "Der totale Widerstand..."; "Total Resistance" reed.Paladin Press , 1992 ISBN-13: 978-0873640213 ]A former, unnamed, Chief of Staff, declared in 1990 to the Swiss deputies that senior officers of the Swiss military, then led by Chief of Staff
Louis de Montmollion , had taken Jaeckle's declined request as the legal basis for the organization of the stay-behind [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.561 ]Stay-behind in the UNA
The stay-behind army was moved in 1967 from the Territorial Service to the UNA, the military intelligence agency, directed by Divisionär
Richard Ochsner . It changed its codename to "Special Service," which was made up of three hierarchical levels. The top level consisted of members of the regular military. The second level was made up of "trusted persons" who recruited activists. These formed the third level. According to the PUK EMD Commission:"The persons recruited by the trusted men could themselves recruit a number of new members to join the resistance organisation; therefore, the exact number of members of the organisation is not known... They are said to have been 1.000 at maximum, divided among 30 to 50 centres." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.561 ]
In 1973, the
Swiss Federal Council formulated thenational security strategy of the country, which included the need for resistance in occupied territory. It reported that "The occupation of the country must not mean that all resistance has ended. Even in this case, an enemy shall meet not only with aversion, but also active resistance." It also highlighted that "Guerrilla war and non-violent resistance in occupied areas are being prepared within the limits of international law, and will, if necessary, be carried out". [cite book
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title =The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland
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url =http://www.danieleganser.ch/e/fachzeitschriften/british/pdf/PublishedVersionGanserBritishinSwitzerlandStay-BehindArmies.pdf
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id =ISSN 0268 4527 |format=PDF] In a similar manner, the introduction of "Der Totale Widerstand" (Total Resistance) byHans von Dach (1958) stated that "of course," the guerrilla methods (which involved variouscovert actions ) were to respect the Hague Conventions on Laws and Customs of War on Land (1899) as well as the fourGeneva Conventions of 1949.At the time, Colonel Herbert Alboth commanded the stay-behind. He was replaced in 1976 by Colonel Albert Bachmann. The next year,
Hans Senn became Chief of Staff of the Swiss armed forces, and reported on5 September 1979 to the united seven Swiss Federal councillors on the activities of UNA and of the stay-behind units. He informed them that the stay-behind cost one millionSwiss Francs a year, which were secretly invested. The counsellors listened in silence, and their absence of objection was interpreted by Hans Senn as an implicit approval of the operation, in which they conserved the possibility ofplausible denial . [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.562 ]The UNA was discovered in the midst of the Bachmann-Schilling affair in November 1979, when Special Service commander Albert Bachmann sent UNA agent Kurt Schilling to
Austria to observe military manoeuvres. There, he was arrested and sentenced for espionage by Austrian authorities, before being sent back to Switzerland, and sentenced again for having revealed classified information. A parliamentary commission was formed to investigate UNA, and reported in 1981:"According to the security policy of the federation, the Special Service has the task of creating favourable conditions for active resistance in Switzerland against an occupying force." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.563 ]
The report concluded that the task was legitimate, although "the internal control of these two services was insufficient." [Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.563 ]
Stay-behind as P-26
Following this event, which led to the resignation of Colonel Bachmann, the stay-behind was recreated, under the code-name P-26. Defence Minister
Georges-André Chevallaz gave his approval to Chief of StaffHans Senn and UNA directorRichard Ochsner . Bachmann was replaced by Colonel Efrem Cattelan, who headed the paramilitary organization starting in October 1979. The code-name alluded to paragraph 426 of the Security and Defence concept of the Federal Council of27 June 1973, which stated the needs of "active resistance." ("See above").Assassination of Herbert Alboth
During the investigations concerning the secret files scandal and P-26, Herbert Alboth, leader of the P-26 "for some time," was assassinated on
April 18 ,1990 , in his flat inLiebefeld nearBern . A short time before, he had written to the MPKaspar Villiger , on March 1, proposing to reveal all that he knew on the stay-behind. The press reported that Alboth had been "killed with his own militarybayonet " with "several stabs to the stomach," while "on the chest of the victim the medical examiners have found a set of characters which were written in felt pen and puzzle the investigators." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.562 ] His death was never resolved, while the Swiss deputies discovered in his flat pictures of senior P-26 members, old documents on training and courses, exercise plans of a conspiratorial character and address list of former members of the "Special Service." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.562 ]The Cornu Report
Following the November 1990 report by the Parliamentary Commission, the
Swiss Socialist Party and the Greens requested further investigations concerning alleged ties between P-26 and other Gladio stay-behind organizations. JudgePierre Cornu was charged with the investigation, and delivered a 100 page report known as the "Cornu Report." He met Italian and Belgian MPs, as well as P-26 members, but London declined to comment (the existence ofMI6 was still un-confirmed by Britain).The Cornu Report stated that P-26 was without "political or legal legitimacy", and described the group's collaboration with British secret services as "intense":
"Unknown to the Swiss government, British officials signed agreements with the organisation, called P26, to provide training in combat, communications, and sabotage. The latest agreement was signed in 1987… P26 cadres participated regularly in training exercises in Britain… British advisers — possibly from the SAS — visited secret training establishments in Switzerland."
Richard Norton-Taylor , [http://www.cambridgeclarion.org/press_cuttings/swiss.subversion_graun_20sep1991.html UK trained secret Swiss force] in "The Guardian ",September 20 ,1991 ]According to the account of the report from
Richard Norton-Taylor , from "The Guardian ", "The activities of P-26, its codes, and the name of the leader of the group, Efrem Cattelan, were known to British intelligence, but the Swiss government was kept in the dark."Despite a parliamentary motion deposed by MP
Josef Lang , which requested the full, non-censored, publication of the Cornu Report, large sections of the latter remained classified and will remain so for the next thirty years. [http://search.parlament.ch/f/homepage/cv-geschaefte.htm?gesch_id=20053096 Parliamentary motion] deposed byJosef Lang ] Since Gladio stay-behind organizations were coordinated by secret organizations ofSHAPE and ultimately responded toSACEUR , head of NATO in Europe, any relationship between P-26 and SACEUR would be an obvious breach of Swiss neutrality. Thus, the matter remains controversial and confidential. A 17-page summary, titled "P-26 not part of an international network," was published on 19 September 1991.Confronted by a question from Socialist deputy
Paul Rechsteiner on 30 September 1991, concerning the non-publication of the Cornu Report, Defence MinisterKaspar Villiger declared that:"The Cornu Report contains numerous pieces of information on foreign secret services and resistance organisations, as well as their structures, hierarchies, and connections... The Cornu Report will not be released and published because it is not the business of the Federal Council to reveal the secret affairs of foreign states." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," quoted p.572 ]
To that, Socialist MP
Susanne Leutenegger-Oberholzer replied: "is the Council not of the opinion that it is deplorable if foreign secret services receive more information than, for instance, Swiss parliamentarians?" [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," quoted p.573 ]Actions of the P-26 and alleged international contacts
However, according to a ETH universitary study by Daniele Ganser, "P26 was not directly involved in the network of NATO's secret armies but it had close contact to
MI6 ," the British secret service which worked closely with theCentral Intelligence Agency during the Cold War and trained Gladio paramilitaries in Italy. [ [http://www.ethlife.ethz.ch/e/articles/sciencelife/NatoGeheimarmee.html Conference "Nato Secret Armies and P26" - The Dark Side of the West] by the ETH Zurich Institute, by Felix Wursten, published on 10 February 2005 en icon/de icon ]While responding to a question in Parliament concerning the assassination of Herbert Alboth (related to the discovery of P-26), National counsellor
Remo Gysin has described the relations between the Swiss stay-behind, MI6 and NATO as "notorious". [http://search.parlament.ch/f/homepage/cv-geschaefte.htm?gesch_id=20053374 Parliamentary question] of MPRemo Gysin concerning the assassination of Herbert Alboth ]Like other stay-behind organizations in Europe, P-26 had weapons caches in Switzerland, while some of its members took paramilitary and
guerrilla warfare training courses with the MI6 in Great Britain.Daniel Ganser: [http://www.psa.ac.uk/journals/pdf/5/2005/Ganser.pdf The Secret Side of International Relations: An approach to NATO’s stay-behind armies in Western Europe] , Published in the "Steton Hall Journal of Diplomacy", pages 38-40.] Foreign instructors also followed courses in Switzerland with P-26. [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.566 ]Swiss military instructor Alois Hürlimann revealed that he had taken part in secret military training in England, which allegedly included a real assault on an Irish Republican Army (IRA) arms depot, in which at least one IRA activist was killed [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.568 ]
In 1976, Colonel Bachmann, head of the Special Service, allegedly reached a mutual cooperation agreement with the British SAS. [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.570 ]
British Field Marshal
Bernard Montgomery , Deputy Supreme Commander of NATO forces in Europe from 1951 to 1958, was in theBernese Oberland each February from 1946 to 1962, for military affairs. He met in 1946 Swiss Defence MinisterKarl Kobelt , Foreign MinisterMax Petitpierre and Chief of StaffLouis de Montmollin to discuss Swiss neutrality and strategy in the post-war period. [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.571 ] According to researches by Swiss historian Mauro Mantovani, Montgomery met again Montmollin in February 1952 to discuss plans in case of a Soviet invasion. They agreed that in case of an emergency, Switzerland would need help from NATO, leading Mantovani to conclude that:"Switzerland during the Cold War was so obviously part of the western camp that western leaders could only wish that all neutrals would take Switzerland as an example. [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," quoted p.572 ]
Italian magistrate
Felice Casson , who first discoveredGladio in Italy , declared: "I am sure that I also saw documents on Gladio contacts with Switzerland" in the "Palazzo Braschi " in Rome, headquarters of theSISMI military intelligence agency. [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," quoted p.574 ]Furthermore, P-26 used Harpoon radios, a powerful encrypted communication system, which was used by the
Belgian stay-behind network as discovered by the Belgian Parliamentary Commission. [ [http://www.senate.be/lexdocs/S0523/S05231297.pdf Belgian parliamentary report concering the stay-behind network] , named "Enquête parlementaire sur l'existence en Belgique d'un réseau de renseignements clandestin international" or "Parlementair onderzoek met betrekking tot het bestaan in België van een clandestien internationaal inlichtingenetwerk" (Parliamentary investigation on the existence in Belgium of an international clandestine intelligence network) ] The Harpoon system, bought by NATO from the German firmAEG Telefunken in the beginning of the 1980s, permitted stay-behind members to send encrypted radio messages across 6.000 km, thus enabling them to maintain relations between themselves. This system is not compatible with the standard communication system used by the Swiss army. However, magistrate Pierre Cornu found that in 1987, P-26 had connected foreign stations of the Harpoon system for around 15 million Swiss francs. Historian Daniele Ganser observed that:"The purchase of the Harpoon equipment linked to NATO command centres in Brussels, the CIA in the US, and MI6 in Great Britain realised the integration of the Swiss stay-behind in the European stay-behind network at a very basic, hardware level." [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.575 ]
On
13 March 1991, Socialist MPEsther Bührer asked in a parliamentary request to the Federal Council if members of P-26 had been involved in the "Kaiseraugst " sabotage operations, which had occurred in 1975 duringanti-nuclear protests against the establishment of anuclear plant in Kaiseraugst, nearBasel . Between 1974 and 1984, more than 30 sabotage operations had been carried out there, and investigations were abandoned without results, although they pointed that they had been "professional" operations. Defence MinisterKaspar Villiger denied any involvement. The left-wing weekly "Wochenzeitung " also declared the request unlikely, as some violent anti-nuclear protesters had allegedly taken credit for the sabotage operations. [ Ganser, "The British Secret Service in Neutral Switzerland," p.566 ]Former MP
Helmut Hubacher , president of theSocial Democratic Party of Switzerland from 1975 to 1990, declared that the existence of P-26 was more disturbing than what professional soldiers alleged it was, since it was not only to counter a possible Soviet invasion, but also had a mandate to become active should the left win the elections and gain parliamentary majority. [ [http://www.ethlife.ethz.ch/e/articles/sciencelife/NatoGeheimarmee.html Conference "Nato Secret Armies and P26" - The Dark Side of the West] by the ETH Zurich Institute, by Felix Wursten, published on 10 February 2005 en icon/de icon ]P-27 Files
Beside P-26, the military intelligence agency also dissimulated P-27, charged with domestic surveillance. According to
Richard Norton-Taylor from "The Guardian "..."P26 was backed by P27, a private foreign intelligence agency funded partly by the government, and by a special unit of Swiss army intelligence which had built up files on nearly 8,000 "suspect persons" including "leftists", "bill stickers", "
Jehovah's witnesses ", people with "abnormal tendencies" andanti-nuclear demonstrators.OnNovember 14 , the Swiss government hurriedly dissolved P26 — the head of which, it emerged, had been paid £100,000 a year." [Richard Norton-Taylor , [http://www.cambridgeclarion.org/press_cuttings/gladio_graun_5dec1990.html "The Gladio File: did fear of communism throw West into the arms of terrorists?"] , in "The Guardian ",December 5 ,1990 ]References
Bibliography
* [http://www.danieleganser.ch/e/fachzeitschriften/british/index.htm THE BRITISH SECRET SERVICE IN NEUTRAL SWITZERLAND] , Daniele Ganser, in "
Intelligence and National Security ", Vol.20, n°4, December 2005, pp.553-580
* Daniele Ganser (2005). "NATO's Secret Armies: Operation GLADIO and Terrorism in Western Europe", London,Franck Cass . ISBN 0-7146-8500-3 (a quick [http://www.commongroundcommonsense.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=20154 resume available here] )
*"Bericht der Parlamentarischen Untersuchungskommission zur besonderen Klärung von Vorkommnissen von grosser Tragweite im Eidgenössischen Militärdepartement", Bern, 17 November 1990 (PUK EMD report)
*Short Cornu Report. The complete version remains classsified.
*"Bachmann 1981 Report" from the Commission headed by MPJean Pascal Delamuraz . Parts remained classified.See also
*
Operation Gladio
*Secret files scandal
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