John Banks (mercenary recruiter)

Last updated
John Banks
Birth nameJohn Edward Banks
Nickname(s)"The Angola recruiter" [1]
Born1945 (age 7879)
Aldershot, Hampshire, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch British Army
Years of service1962–1969
RankMajor [2]
Unit Parachute Regiment (United Kingdom)
Battles/wars

John Edward Banks (born 1945) is a British former soldier, mercenary recruiter, and the founder of the Security Advisory Services.

Contents

Early life

John Banks was born in Aldershot in 1945 into the family of an Army Medical Corps officer serving in the Airborne Forces. [3] John spent his childhood years in Camberley not far away from the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. As a child he attended service schools in Egypt and Cyprus. His military career started in 1962 when he was only 17 years old. [4] After his initial training Banks served in the "Pathfinder" unit of the Second Battalion of the Parachute Regiment. [5] In four years, he was transferred to the Second Battalion’s Special Patrol Company, a unit trained to penetrate behind the enemy lines. [6] Banks took part in the hostilities in Malaysia, Yemen and Oman. [7] Due to injuries received in combat he could no longer continue his active service and began to work as an unarmed combat instructor at the Parachute Regiment Battle School in Wales. [8]

Secret military operations

After being discharged from the British Army in 1969, [9] [10] John Banks joined the United States Army Special Forces, [11] according to his own claims, but soon had to leave it too due to the involvement of his brother Roger in arms trade with Viet Cong. [12] In 1970 Banks got acquainted to David Stirling, the founder of the Special Air Service [13] and started to work for the Stirling's PMC Watchguard International. [14] Banks claimed Stirling hired him for the "Hilton Assignment", [15] a secret military operation aimed at overthrowing Colonel Gaddafi by inciting an uprising in the prison of Tripoli. [16] But the assignment was canceled under the pressure exerted by British and American diplomats. [17] John Banks participated in a number of military operations in Biafra, South Vietnam and Iraq as a mercenary. [18]

Private military companies

In 1975 John Banks co-founded a private military company Security Advisory Services. [19] [20] [21] While running the company's office in Sandhurst, [22] Banks engaged in recruiting mercenaries for the war in Southern Rhodesia [23] and Angolan Civil War. [24] [25] Some of the recruited mercenaries who fought for the National Liberation Front of Angola were captured and sentenced to death during the Luanda Trial. Banks did not appear to have any sympathy for their fate and said to the BBC reporters in Britain:

I don't feel sorry for them. They are soldiers, they knew what they were doing. I would do it again. [26]

In spite of leaving Security Advisory Services in 1976, John Banks kept recruiting mercenaries for the Angolan National Front. [27] Later on, he founded the Anti-Communist Revolutionary Organization to send mercenaries to fight the Cuban army in Jamaica. [28]

During an IRA arms procurement trial in 1977, Banks gave testimony which revealed strong ties of his former company with ex-SAS servicemen [29] and with the British PMC Keenie Meenie Services as well. [30]

In 1978 John Banks published the book The Wages of War: the Life of a Modern Mercenary, summarizing his mercenary experience. [31]

Prison

In 1980 Banks was convicted of extorting 250 thousand dollars from the Nicaragua embassy in London in exchange for the information about an attempt upon the life of the former president Somoza. [32] [33] Banks claimed at the Central Criminal Court that he was one of the six British and American mercenaries hired by the CIA to assassinate Somoza by order of the US President Carter. [34] But the mercenaries did not want to kill Somoza and chose John Banks to disclose the assassination plan, according to his allegations. [35] Banks denied the extortion charges. [36] After his escape from the Coldingley prison, John Banks was captured and imprisoned again in the end of 1981. [37] According to the Scottish anarchist Stuart Christie, in 1982 John Banks was already at large and worked as a security advisor for Muammar Gaddafi. [38]

Later life

At the beginning of 1990s John Banks allegedly took part in an undercover operation staged by Customs and Excise officers to arrest a drug smuggler from Ghana. [2] Banks worked for the Special Branch and then for SO15. [39] He also worked for the Scorpions, a unit of the National Prosecuting Authority of South Africa, which was in fact an intelligence unit, according to Banks. [39] In his interview with Sean Stone in December 2014, Banks claimed that US intelligence services planned a bombing during the 2010 FIFA World Cup. [39]

Notes

  1. Campbell 1978.
  2. 1 2 Connett 1993.
  3. Aspinall1, section 2: "John Banks was born in Aldershot England in 1945, his father having been an officer in the Army Medical Corps attached to the Airborne Forces".
  4. Aspinall1, section 2: "In 1962 at the age of 17 years he enlisted in the Army at Maida Barracks".
  5. Aspinall1, section 3: "On completion of his initial training he was posted to 'D' Company the elite 'Pathfinder' unit of the Second Battalion of the Parachute Regiment".
  6. Aspinall1, section 3: "A unit specialising in the deep penetration of enemy held territory by small ruthless patrols".
  7. Aspinall1, section 3: "John saw action around the world in Aden, Borneo, Cyprus, Malaya and the Trucial Oman States".
  8. Aspinall1, section 4: "Because of his injuries in 1968 he was posted to the Parachute Regiment Battle School in Wales, as an unarmed combat instructor".
  9. Campbell 1978, p. 10: "Banks, now notorious as the Angola recruiter, was dishonourably discharged from the Parachute Regiment".
  10. Aspinall1, section 5: "On 10th June 1969 he was discharged from the Army".
  11. Aspinall1, section 5: "John then claims that he applied and was accepted to join the US Army Special Forces".
  12. Aspinall1, section 5: "But was released after a few weeks when it was discovered that his brother Roger (the Katangese Mercenary) was believed to be running guns to the Vietcong in the Mekong Delta".
  13. Aspinall1, section 5: "In 1970 he met up with David Sterling (founder of the S.A.S.)".
  14. Campbell 1978, p. 10: "Among Watchguard's employees were, at one time or another, John Banks".
  15. Campbell 1978, p. 10: "...and claims to have been hired by Stirling for the 'Hilton Assignment'".
  16. Campbell 1978, p. 9: "They planned a sudden raid on the Tripoli prison, freeing 150 of Gaddafi's political prisoners, and sparking off an uprising".
  17. Campbell 1978, p. 9: "Under heavy British and American diplomatic pressure, the operation was abandoned".
  18. Weinraub2 1976, section 3 Served as Mercenary: "...said that he had fought as a paid soldier in Biafra as well as with the Australians in South Vietnam, and the Kurds in Iraq".
  19. Campbell 1978, p. 11: "...John Banks set up his Security Advisory Services (SAS!) recruiting organisation above a laundrette".
  20. Bloch & Fitzgerald 1983, p. 194: "Using a firm named Security Advisory Services as a front, he recruited a total of 120 mercenaries".
  21. Weinraub1 1976, section 1: "Another owner is John Banks, a former Paratrooper".
  22. Weinraub1 1976, section 2 Third Key Figure: "The Camberley office is listed in the name of Mr. Banks".
  23. Weinraub2 1976, section 3 Served as Mercenary: "Mr. Banks, who last year tried to recruit white mercenaries to help black Rhodesian nationalist guerrillas".
  24. Weinraub2 1976, section 1: "...described himself as 'military adviser' to the National Front for the Liberation of Angola".
  25. Bloch & Fitzgerald 1983, p. 50: "...group, led by John Banks - who provided the British mercenary corps for the Angolan civil war".
  26. BBC 1976, section 10: "In Britain the man who recruited the British mercenaries, John Banks, said: 'I don't feel sorry for them. They are soldiers, they knew what they were doing. I would do it again'".
  27. Hills 1976, section 3: "...a ragtag battalion of mercenaries to fight Cubans and communists in the hills of Jamaica".
  28. Campbell 1978, p. 11: "...three of five key alleged KMS associates feature prominently in Banks' eight year tale of mercenary work".
  29. Banks 1978.
  30. Nicholson-Lord 1980, section 2: "John Banks, accused of demanding money with menaces from the Nicaraguan embassy for information on the alleged plot".
  31. Nicholson-Lord 1980, section 7: "The prosecution has alleged he attempted to blackmail the Nicaraguan embassy by demanding $250,000 in return for information".
  32. Nicholson-Lord 1980, section 1: "A contract to assassinate former President Somoza of Nicaragua was taken out by the Central Intelligence Agency on the orders of President Carter and his security advisers, it was alleged at the Central Criminal Court yesterday".
  33. Nicholson-Lord 1980, section 7: "I was chosen to blow the operation".
  34. Nicholson-Lord 1980, section 7: "Mr.Banks, aged 35, of Camberley, Surrey, has denied three charges of demanding money with menaces".
  35. Aspinall2.
  36. Christie 1982, p. 12: "Banks is now rumored to be working as a 'security advisor' to Colonel Ghadaffi in Libya along with 'ex' CIA operatives Frank Terpil and Ed Wilson".
  37. 1 2 3 Stone 2014.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Special Air Service</span> Special forces of the British Army

The Special Air Service (SAS) is a special forces unit of the British Army. It was founded as a regiment in 1941 by David Stirling, and in 1950 it was reconstituted as a corps. The unit specialises in a number of roles including counter-terrorism, hostage rescue, direct action and special reconnaissance. Much of the information about the SAS is highly classified, and the unit is not commented on by either the British government or the Ministry of Defence due to the secrecy and sensitivity of its operations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mercenary</span> Soldier who fights for hire

A mercenary, also called a merc, soldier of fortune, or hired gun, is a private individual who joins an armed conflict for personal profit, is otherwise an outsider to the conflict, and is not a member of any other official military. Mercenaries fight for money or other forms of payment rather than for political interests.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter McAleese</span> British Army soldier and writer (1942–2024)

Peter McAleese was a Scottish soldier and mercenary.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Costas Georgiou</span> Cypriot-born British mercenary (1951–1976)

Costas Georgiou, also known by his alias Colonel Callan, was a Cypriot-born British mercenary executed in Angola following the Luanda Trial for activities during the civil war phase of the Angolan War of Independence.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Operation Barras</span> 2000 military operation in Sierra Leone led by the United Kingdom

Operation Barras was a British Army operation that took place in Sierra Leone on 10 September 2000, during the late stages of the nation's civil war. The operation aimed to release five British soldiers of the Royal Irish Regiment and their Sierra Leone Army (SLA) liaison officer, who were being held by a militia group known as the "West Side Boys". The soldiers were part of a patrol that was returning from a visit to Jordanian peacekeepers attached to the United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) at Masiaka on 25 August 2000 when they turned off the main road and down a track towards the village of Magbeni. There the patrol of twelve men was overwhelmed by a large number of heavily armed rebels, taken prisoner, and transported to Gberi Bana on the opposite side of Rokel Creek.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paddy Mayne</span> Irish rugby union player, lawyer, boxer, and soldier

Lieutenant Colonel Robert Blair Mayne,, better known as Paddy Mayne, was a British Army officer from Newtownards, capped for Ireland and the British and Irish Lions at rugby union, lawyer, amateur boxer, and a founding member of the Special Air Service (SAS).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rhodesian Special Air Service</span> Military unit

The Rhodesian Special Air Service or Rhodesian SAS was the tier one special forces unit of the Rhodesian Army. It comprised:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment</span> Military unit

The 1st Marine Infantry Parachute Regiment or 1er RPIMa is a unit of the French Army Special Forces Command, therefore part of the Special Operations Command.

The history of the British Army's Special Air Service (SAS) regiment of the British Army begins with its formation during the Western Desert Campaign of the Second World War, and continues to the present day. It includes its early operations in North Africa, the Greek Islands, and the Invasion of Italy. The Special Air Service then returned to the United Kingdom and was formed into a brigade with two British, two French and one Belgian regiment, and went on to conduct operations in France, Italy again, the Low Countries and finally into Germany.

Special Forces of Zimbabwe are the units of the Zimbabwe National Army that operate as special forces. These forces have been deployed in several African conflicts, including the Mozambique Civil War and the Second Congo War.

<i>The Mayfair Set</i> British TV series or programme

The Mayfair Set, subtitled Four Stories about the Rise of Business and the Decline of Political Power, is a BBC television documentary series by filmmaker Adam Curtis. It explores the decline of Britain as a world power, the proliferation of asset stripping in the 1970s, and how buccaneer capitalists helped to shape the climate of the Thatcher years, by focusing on Colonel David Stirling, Jim Slater, Sir James Goldsmith and Tiny Rowland—members of London's elite Clermont Club in the 1960s. It won a BAFTA Award for Best Factual Series or Strand in 2000.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mervyn Butler</span> British Army general (1913–1976)

General Sir Mervyn Andrew Haldane Butler, was a British Army officer who served as Commander-in-Chief Strategic Command.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">44 Pathfinder Platoon</span> Military unit

The 44 Pathfinder Platoon is part of the 44 Parachute Regiment. The pathfinder is a trained and specialized paratrooper, who performs covertly behind enemy lines, either in small groups or in collaboration with other reconnaissance units.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bob Lilley (British Army soldier)</span> British Army soldier

Ernest Thomas "Bob" Lilley M.M., B.E.M. was a British Army soldier. A founding member of the British Special Air Service Regiment, he formerly served with the Coldstream Guards. Lilley was one of the first four men selected by Colonel David Stirling to comprise L Detachment 1st S.A.S. in Middle East Headquarters at Cairo in 1940. He took part in many operations behind enemy lines in Libya against Italian and German forces during World War II.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nish Bruce</span> British soldier

Charles Christian Cameron "Nish" Bruce, was a British Army soldier.

Brigadier Andrew Christopher "Andy" Massey OBE was a British Army officer who served in Oman, Dhofar and Northern Ireland. He was a commander of the 22 SAS Regiment before retiring as a Brigadier.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2nd Parachute Chasseur Regiment</span> Military unit

The 2nd Parachute Chasseur Regiment or 2e RCP, is one of the most decorated French units of the Second World War, the only land unit awarded the red fourragère in that war, including six citations at the orders of the armed forces. The French Navy 1500-ton class submarine Casabianca also accumulated six citations at the orders of the armed forces and therefore its crewmen were entitled to wear the same fourragère.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charlie Christodoulou</span> British mercenary killed in Angola

Charles Christodoulou was a British soldier in the Parachute Regiment who later served as a foreign mercenary during the Angolan War of Independence of the 1970s. Known as 'Shotgun Charlie', he was involved in the murder of at least 167 people during that conflict.

The Rhodesian government actively recruited white personnel from other countries from the mid-1970s until 1980 to address manpower shortages in the Rhodesian Security Forces during the Rhodesian Bush War. It is estimated that between 800 and 2,000 foreign volunteers enlisted. The issue attracted a degree of controversy as Rhodesia was the subject of international sanctions that banned military assistance due to its illegal declaration of independence and the control which the small white minority exerted over the country. The volunteers were often labelled as mercenaries by opponents of the Rhodesian regime, though the Rhodesian government did not regard or pay them as such.

Security Advisory Services was a British private military company founded by Leslie Aspin, an arms dealer, John Banks, a former paratrooper of the British Army, and Frank Perren, a former Royal Marine, in order to recruit mercenaries for military operations abroad. In 1976, the company massively hired paid soldiers to fight in the Angolan Civil War, which was the biggest mercenary recruitment operation in Britain since the Nigerian Civil War at the end of the 1960s.

References