tv Sophie Co RT June 30, 2014 2:29pm-3:01pm EDT
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hello welcome to sophie and co i'm sophie shevardnadze and in today's will the title world's mercenary business is booming despite their murky legal status soldiers of fortune are in demand and the pay is high but is it all about the money and the loss of five wars for casual care about which side they're on well i'm a man and the late british s.a.'s officer turned mercenary who got paid to fight conflicts in africa but it ended up costing came his freedom is our guest today. soldiers of fortune dogs of war or something knights in shining armor. going to
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save the day when governments fail for others their blood hounds thirsty for cash ready to kill for the highest bidder. where does the truth lie and mercenaries make the world safer or rather just pools in the game of power so we have simon right in the studio expertise military officer also a former mercenary simon it's really great to have you with us today you were serving in elite royal troops you were taking orders from the queen then how hard was it afterwards to sell your services to the higher bidder well it wasn't really like that because first of all i was never a senior enough for the queen crush to tell me personally what. i was you know as a captain in the scots guards. the scots goes overseas has the privilege of being the queen and then when i became a month into it you know we actually strongly got involved in this because we were attacked. and. we we sided with the government for
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so for me that wasn't. that hard a transition to make a tool because i found myself actually in the un go nomi i was i was signed up in the eyes of the nami and in fact i had the rank of brigadier general in the un go no me so a lot of things were not so different but how much how much of it was about the money though because private military company does imply selling your skills and services for money and you weren't really doing it for pro bono. no that's true. but what i'm saying is that at the beginning when we knew also me how i started i became a us and not with. we obviously executive outcomes and money became much more of an ac and yes it was primarily for the food for money that we were operating but i'm just trying to imagine for myself i mean how hard is
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it to justify things you fight for one the war that you are fighting has nothing to do with your family your men your country men. i didn't find it difficult being a professional soldier in the push for twelve years. we were asked to do things expected to do things that were not necessarily how we saw the world and the necessarily what we wanted to do so to then find myself. protecting my old company in the first instance and then making money in one go though which was a country i really liked. with fine and then to find myself in sierra leone fighting really gospelly rebels who were committing terrible atrocities was also fine. but. i just wonder why did you leave the british army in the first place i mean you know you guys are paid to to to fight for
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a good cause is i mean british army certainly positions itself to be at the rescue of democracies in crisis. joe. well i mean i actually joined in fact i was asked to stay on in the british army that time and i was asked to do another job with my regiment which was then especially with or had been the special . and i was very tempted to do that job but my friend who was the owner and chief executive of heritage oil and gas said come on simon it's time you made some real money you got kids etc etc join my old company so my new career was as an old man it was accidental that we then became what we did become which was you know the number one private military company in africa so it was a manufacturer the main difference between your work as a mercenary and between being an officer in british special forces.
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i would actually say no because when you find yourself in war was purely for money or mainly for money then there are a lot of things which become extremely difficult. which which are issues which are problems which you do not have if you are. in a in a normal you know sovereign state military fourth so what issues are those. well for example you might find yourself having to make a decision as to whether we have three helicopters in an operational theater or two now if it's three the cost of that helicopter and operating it coming straight out of your pocket if you are one of the owners of that company. now you know you could probably get away with two but the lack of that is very likely to lead to.
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you know quite probably the death of one of you your soldiers say what you what you end up having to do is make. financial business like decisions. with on the other end of the scale instead of the normal sort of business decision where is it a good idea to invest this money or not it's like people's lives and that is hard and that is not something you have to do in a regular army those decisions of basically being taken for you in a regular army and you just have to make the most of most of it and get on with your orders os so it's just easier to obey orders then to make your own decisions. well make decisions when you're having to make that kind of decision this is tough because obviously you know you are that you make you're making money but you don't say you're you're playing a balance but are we going to be utterly ruthless with the lives of our men and
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boost the profit or walk. but someone did you actually did you actually fight with a gun in your hand where you in the front lines or was it just a logistical work. i was shot at on a number of occasions i was a moment. but i never actually got into the position where i had to shoot back and i was a fairly senior officer i'm asking because sierra leone a is known to have children soldiers in iraq and so they're rebels i was wondering if you've ever come across kids with the guns what is it like facing your enemy but there are kids with the guns yeah i mean like in sierra leone i never got close to fighting when the word. child soldiers involved. but these child so do is. i mean they're very often on drugs. that were being committed by them were dreadful
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oh yeah absolutely but i mean i'm just assuming that like a european brad man when he sees a child soldier even if that child soldier is on drugs probably has a moral dilemma whether to shoot at him or not you know i was never in that position but i guess some of the guys were. what happened there must be pretty tough for them they did you guys ever talk about it did any of your colleagues tell you about this movie you know because in a very often the fight scene is not so that you don't know in direct sights of the enemy it's a case who is in coming from. you can't even really tell whether the children know whether the adults put it. coming towards you either way so for those who are actually fighting on the front lines day considered just child rebels to be a full fledged soldiers and full fledged enemy right. basically yes. do you know
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how many civilians have suffered during your operations if any. well i mean there was dreadful suffering going on by a very large number of civilians no question. two with two and those who have both of them as quickly as possible but during that operation seeing through all the operation itself. do you know how many civilians i don't know if you really don't marriage so. how many civilians we months of killed accidentally all of them yeah is that where you mean yes no one in for one of the one of the things that executive outcomes is very proud of is that in both of those wars in angola and sierra leone there was never one single charge made against that had been any kind of atrocity. committed by us now that's actually
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a track record which i think most regular armies would be jealous of but so when you were talking to local people outside the operation did they treat you as liberators our enemies. they treat this is as liberators absolutely no in fact all morning kasia i was that he approached by the mail over town in sierra leone a place called koidu by the men who senior counsel those who had a bag of money that they gave me to try to get me because they had that we were withdrawing from. that particular place on the orders of the government and it amazes me that here with these extremely tough south african soldiers with a pretty ferocious reputation and here with these local people begging us to stay. we're going to take a break now and i right after i will be back with the worst every summer man to
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we're back with simon mann x. british s.a.'s officer and also on the former mercenary simon did you ever witness anything good like to forget during your time enough for a cop. you know. i don't like seeing the results of fighting and i don't think any soldier does. it's always shocking. it stays with you and you wish it wasn't happening but what was it exactly was it something particular to those operations or to africa because i mean obviously no one likes to play the war but was it something so dreadful about those operations in africa that you would like to forget. oh yeah there was a village in. sierra leone where where we go we go off to the u.s. who were the guerrilla force had pulled. do a bit to the border you were over the or over the village. but it wasn't it wasn't
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a pretty sight. was anyone worse than what you so or experienced in the way african prisons that you were put in for a short period of time. you know what i was as you know i was in prison for five and a half years in total four years in zimbabwe and eighteen months in ecuador guinea not tarrie it's present in ecuador i mean that was very i mean no one wants to be heading for a scene that was called black beach although actually i think i did i was in solitary confinement in that beach all the time. and so i didn't see a lot of the stuff that was going on outside myself but how did. we i was in the. well in the end they treated me well managed to help them. i had a long interrogation and a long trial and in the course of that. we got along better and better
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as time went on but it was it was tough because i was. in solitary confinement and for the three months i was in handcuffs and leg irons all the time and the climate that is pretty vicious i mean it's really really whole and sticky with a lot of mosquitoes no mosquito net no ventilation eccentrics cetera so it was quite it was quite testing what about zimbabwe trees and. with those a very different experience because that i with with general prison and. very overcrowded prison. you know a rough place but how is it for a foreigner to be in africa prison with everyone else did they treat you better or worse because you were a foreigner. well african culture is extremely friendly especially
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to foreigners and whole instinct is actually to look after you. and i was look. i get i guess you got lucky there at least but now i'm thinking i'm surely you knew that this things you were doing and i mean fighting a mercenary war was illegal. and you were most likely to end up in jail were you prepared for the consequences. i would say it's obviously i had to be i mean and i couldn't possibly. do what we said trying to do which was to overthrow the government control give me how do i not being aware that if things went wrong i would have been thrown into prison i was very aware of it. so far as i was concerned it was just a part of the equation it was a part of the risk that we were running. so the money was really good enough for that risk to be taken. alive he lost
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a whole lot of money in fact i mean in reality i wasn't paid anything to do the equitorial guinea exercise. how did it all being successful then i would have been paid a lot of money but only after a long train of if you know if we'd been successful if the person we back to ultimately been elected if you cabinet decided to all of the agreements he'd made etc etc so it was by no means something you're going to take your bank manager but can i ask you something when you sign up when you when you used to sign up for this kind of things were your interests somehow insured protected or you were just sent out there in an open war failed and whatever happens happens there's no guarantee. you know you have to accept if you do anything like this even if you know or if you suspect that friendly government in favor of the
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operation you must realize that if it goes wrong you are going to be on your own and if you're flying around africa as a white mercenary they're going to throw away the key if you're lucky. if you're not lucky they're going to chop you up and eat you mean but i doubt you expressed remorse on your part about wanting to overthrow the president of equitorial again yeah did you just say that to get you out of jail because the man isn't you know what's most benevolent leader right he is a dictator who has been there for the last thirty five years sure sure well like i said before while it while i was in prison for a guinea in the course of my interrogation my trial. we found common ground. basically his enemies were in fact by that stage mind because my squirrel colleagues the people who'd set me up in the operation completely
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completely failed to back me up to they did they made they did nothing to help the men my men or the men's families who were deserted and without support down south africa and of course you know they were desperate and i was in really big trouble because i was in a prison with seventy guys who i'd led in and when they discovered that nothing was being done to help their families that didn't make my position in the prison any easier. so it was a genuine regret and i can remember i was with that quarter of guinea it was and it still is i mean we shouldn't have done it we you know we're going to do something that was wrong. and. i regretted it. but what was wrong about it to meddle in foreign countries affairs story was wrong because he realized that they dictator a guy was a good guy. know is wrong because we we cool so much suffering
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among a lot of people. and you know we're trying to act in a very arbitrary way and we didn't really know as it turned out what the situation at croke and he was we thought we did it. in reality a quick tour of duty although it still has a very bad reputation in reality it is heading in the right direction they're working very hard to you know human rights and social system. back to standard so now that you've experienced african politics firsthand how pervasive was the outside influence. interesting question. nine goes. with the worst war of the sorry let me rephrase it and go with the worst proxy war of the whole cold war there were russian troops
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there were cuban troops that. on one side there were american and south african troops on the other. the whole peace plan was all of getting those foreign troops out. and that with the situation that we found ourselves in when we were attacked. and the foreign influence with massive there's no question. and i would guess it for us to say that when you need to went back to war illegally they were probably pushed back from war by various interests know to be the south africans. sierra leone was a completely completely different animal in the i don't think it was i don't the anyone even really knew or cared what was happening in sierra leone which. is as as
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bad or worse. but also i know that you were asked to help start the iraq war what was that all about and just how close are governments and intelligence services with mercenary soldiers well i wasn't. i wasn't paid. for that. i would i would argue that that wasn't a mercenary thing it was a it was a very strange thing and i was involved with a guy who is now actually dead called david hart he was a remarkable character was close to lady thatcher at one time. he was writing papers that were going to straight to tony blair. and this was in the. this was in the run up to the iraq invasion so i guess this was in two thousand and two before the decisions had really been made and he needed help to write these
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papers because he himself had no military. so i said to him well why do you want to have what you want what you want me to help you get in loads of people who can help you he said oh well you know you were in the s.a.'s and i said to david you know there are one hundred people within a mile of here we were having lunch and in the ritz actually i said there are a hundred people in a mother who were also in the s.s. no better qualified than me and he said ah but they haven't fortune one to private true private. in sierra leone. so i did help him and i helped him by writing papers of my own which he then used in his papers as to how. they were fools of the iraq war can i ask you something would you if you were right now offered a contract to topple bashar al assad would you go for it i would absolutely not for that. i think that situation is so horrific and so complex no that would be
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and i must be getting old but also that these are your words toppling foreign governments is what democracy is all about do you still think so. democracy is about changing governments but it's about changing governments in a legal and hopefully no military norm violent way. we don't see much of that lately i mean we're. once again the what they're trying to do in syria you know we can also talk about all these countries an arab spring but it's going to take us to a whole new subject but general you know toppling governments for democracy sake doesn't usually bring democracy nowadays because those countries where the governments were changed are really much better off than they were before. yeah i
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mean a very big subject. i'm on twitter and i have tweeted about this quite a few times and i've actually said if you look at revolutions. the french the british the russian they're almost invariably followed by periods of great unrest for a revolution to go straight from being of. to being a well run democracy is impossible it just won't happen because the acts of the revolution. there are off the shocks great that there is a period of chaos. thank you so much for this interesting insight in your life and mercenary work we're talking to simon mann. as a former mercenary who is talking about his life experience during its operations as mercenary in africa that's it for this edition of i will see you next time.
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my patients. i will not give deadly doses to anybody. or advise others to do so. i will never do harm to the. doctors of the docs on october. fifth with the economic ups and downs in the fine at college months day the london deal sang and the rest of the life they meet a few will be everything nothing. this
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is what we do we kill people and break things we can see something if simple as people playing a soccer game we can see individual players in their community if. i can only see his facial expression you can see his mouth open in crying out. maybe cursed us or maybe even asked. for forgiveness for. there must be near certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured. right from the scene. of the first trip. and i think the church. on our reporters splitter. in.
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russia just ukrainian border guards joined forces to fall to police checkpoints while always wanted to could even be invited to but only if the truce in the east is extended also. to do. a russian cameramen is killed in the region after a bus carrying journalists and civilians is shot despite an ongoing cease fire. the u.s. sun's its first batch of military aid to help the iraqi government come to the sweeping offensive of radical fighters as they proclaim. captured. and as the blood flow.
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