A mercenary massacre in the Congo, 1964 - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Geopolitical Hotspots (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-20.html) +--- Thread: A mercenary massacre in the Congo, 1964 (/thread-2507.html) |
A mercenary massacre in the Congo, 1964 - Paul Rigby - 01-11-2009 Extract from the News of the World, 22 November 1964, cited by Bertrand Russell in his article, The Labor Party’s Foreign Policy, from The Minority of One, April 1965, based on the text of a speech he delivered at the London School of Economics, 15 February 1965. The News of the World piece was based on the testimony of a disillusioned British mercenary: Quote:“On the way to Stanleyville one of our vehicles broke down. We took our gear off it and retreated into the bush. Late in the afternoon we went back to the vehicle, but found it completely wrecked… A mercenary massacre in the Congo, 1964 - Jan Klimkowski - 01-11-2009 Quote:We paused for a few minutes, and then came the order to fire. There was a great crackle of shots from machine guns and our deadly new Belgium rifles. Women screamed and fell. Little children just stood there, dazed, or cartwheeled hideously as bullets slammed into them. Random snapshots. Women and children slaughtered. My Lai. Quote:Then, as usual, we raced into the place, still firing as we went. Some of us pitched cans of petrol on to the homes before putting a match to them. Others threw phosphorous hand grenades, which turned human beings into blazing inextinguishable torches of fire. White phosphorus used on a civilian population. Fallujah and Gaza. Quote:For a while, as we raced along, there was bedlam. Shrieks, moans, shrill cries for mercy. And, above all, the throaty, half-crazed bellowings of those commandoes among us who quite obviously utterly loved this sort of thing. Dogs of war high on the bloodlust, their sordid wages an afterthought... |