Gerald Bull - Gerald Vincent Bull 1928-1990
IRAQ's ADVANCED 155mm GUN HAS MAIN ORIGINS IN CANADA
As reported over past months in The Wednesday
Report, Canadian born Dr. Gerry Bull and his
Canadian-based Space Research Corporation (SRC) were directly responsible
in the late 1970s for the development of advanced guns as well as
full-bore and base-bleed ammunition technologies within South Africa.
Later, from the early 1980s until recently, he brought more advanced
expertise to Iraq. A key product of Bull's endeavours, the G-5 155mm
self-propelled howitzer has surfaced in original form or in variants
within Chile, Austria, Germany, Belgium and perhaps most significantly,
Iraq. In 1980 on June 16, Bull was convicted
on criminal charges in a Rutland, Vermont court for smuggling gun
barrels and ammunition to South Africa. He later pleaded guilty in
Montreal, on August 14 of the same year, to violating U.N. arms sanctions
also against South Africa. The Quebec court fined SRC $55,000. The
Canadian convictions involved "shipments of howitzer parts" both directly
and indirectly to South Africa. On the U.S. charges, Bull eventually
served a short prison sentence in the United States and paid several
thousands of dollars in fines. On March 22 of
this year, Gerry Bull was murdered in his Brussels apartment. Shortly
afterwards, a series of revelations tied him and SRC to voluminous arms
dealings with Iraq, including development of the fabled Iraqi 600
kilometer-range, forty-meter-barrel "Supergun". Evidence of the monstrous
gun surfaced when British officials on April 11 intercepted shipments of
barrel parts destined for Iraq. The sections were made by Sheffield
Engineering, a subsidiary of Sheffield Forgemasters. SRC had arranged for
their purchase. SRC's technology development
ties with the Iraqis included the Scud B, extensive 155mm gun and
ammunition development, as well as 210mm self-propelled howitzers
currently manufactured in facilities north of Baghdad, and the overall
155mm GC-45 artillery system. Other developments Bull is believed to have
been helping Iraq with included the amazing 1000/405mm (1000mm smooth bore
saboted down to 405mm) Ultra Long Range (ULR) gun with a 2.32 meter long
shell having a mass of around 1,800 kilograms. (See The Wednesday
Report, April 18 and August 15.) Iraq
first acquired the G-5 155mm artillery piece in the early 1980s from
South Africa. Later in 1986-87, a time when Bull's influence increased in
Baghdad, Saddam Hussein, who was at the time angry with South Africa,
switched to Austria as a principal supplier. The first of Iraq's G-5s were
built by South African firm Lyttelton Engineering Works of Verwoerdberg
and sold through Pretoria's roguish export firm, Armscor. The original gun
barrels were built by Krykor while Summerset Chemicals (both of South
Africa) built the explosive charges for the gun. With technology transfers
from South Africa and later Austria, coupled with Gerry Bull's direct
assistance, the Iraqis now have the complete manufacturing capacity for
powder, shells and barrels. It is estimated that Iraq can manufacture
1,000 replacement barrels per year. Today
more than two hundred G-5 155mm howitzers exist within the arsenals of
Iraq. The gun is capable of firing a shell some 40 kilometers, greater
than any modern artillery of its type. The G-5 and its ammunition employ
one of Bull's favourite techniques. The accuracy of the gun is greatly
enhanced by firing base-bleed ammunition. Extra powder is burned at the
base of the projectile as it exits the barrel, thus stabilizing the shell.
The technology of the gun is brilliant. Once
asked why he did not pursue sales of such products to Canada, Bull
told The Wednesday Report, "Anything with my name on it you can
forget for the Canadian government."
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PROFILE: BELCAN TECHNOLOGIES INC.
Belcan Technologies Inc. of Montreal is the first
company to be featured. In an extensive interview, Belcan's new
president, Paul Janiga not only outlined his company's business and
prospects, but provided valuable insight into the fortunes of its
deceased parent, PRB of Belgium. This now-bankrupt munitions maker
is said to have been involved in providing propellant and projectile
design capabilities for the `Supergun' projects of murdered Canadian
arms developer, Dr. Gerald Bull.
Janiga spent many years in academia and received his M.E.
degree for Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics from McGill
University in 1970. He joined Bull's Space Research Corporation
(SRC) in 1976 and played a major part in developing the legendary
GC-45 155mm gun. He remained there until the company's bankruptcy in
1980. Then he did various stints of consulting work including work
on the M-114/39 modification for RDM. He then worked on the Canadian
Patrol Frigate programme for SCAN Marine. In 1983 he began doing
consulting work for PRB.
Belcan Technologies was set up in February 1986
as a wholly-owned subsidiary of PRB. Janiga became Technical
Director responsible for artillery munitions development including
support for product sales and marketing. While Philip Glibert,
assistant general manager of PRB was President, Janiga was in charge
of day-to-day administration of Belcan business matters.
Janiga described the reasons for Belcan's founding as
three-fold. "First, to provide a corporate roof for a group of
people with expertise in field artillery to provide services to
PRB in the field of test evaluation and engineering. The second
reason was that PRB at that time had an agreement with the
(Canadian) government whereby they would provide technology on ERFB
(Extended Range, Full Bore) shell technology in return for access to
ranges. It was a way to officialize PRB's presence in Canada."
Janiga defined the third reason as, "maybe my own invention but it
did provide liaison between DND and PRB, as opposed to having some
agent sitting in Ottawa."
When asked if they provided any services in the field of
range management Janiga said, "We have offered services. In fact,
we've provided services to PRB to look for ranges, to establish
ranges outside of Canada... At one time PRB needed ranges outside of
Belgium for long range projectiles... |
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We investigated for them two or three sites to see whether they
would be suitable for this type of work. Now in Canada we also
attempt to officially provide this service... We participated in the
evaluation of certain sites for this type of testing. But I would
have to stress this was not done under contract... but on an
off-the-record type of... informal basis."
When queried about Belcan's unsuccessful attempts in
1986-87 to set up ranges at St. Ann du Lac and Highwater,
Quebec, the last on a site which once housed Gerry Bull's SRC test
and manufacturing headquarters he replied, "The first one you
mentioned the difficulty there I think was the location which was
too close to a tourist area. And I think the environmental impact
question had not been appropriately addressed... I don't think we
anticipated the local people's resistance to such an enterprise in
their area. As for the one in Highwater, I think that one was really
bad timing... When we started doing the study it looked like a great
idea. By the time we were ready to do something about it, both PRB
and Canadian Arsenals at that time did not have any business left.
There also was the environmental impact... The problems surfaced,
but in that particular case we did our homework and I think we would
have had problems in meeting the environmental department's noise
requirements."
Local resistance to the PRB purchase of the Highwater site
was joined by members of Gerald Bull's family. (After the 1980
bankruptcy of SRC-Quebec due to the guns to South Africa affair, the
site was sold to an Arab businessman except for a 200-acre property
containing a house owned by Gerry Bull and his wife Mimi. Due to
what they see as inequities in Bull's treatment by PRB over their
co-ownership of Belgian-based SRC International, the family is not a
great fan of the company.) Janiga said, "Yeah, well Mrs. Bull at
that time opposed it because she felt that it would hamper
development of the area. It was going to be too noisy."
On the business side, Belcan has no contracts to provide
services to DND at present. Indeed, Janiga points out that the
"one contract we've had with DND since we've been established (was)
to provide an artillery training aid." Indeed, Belcan has more often
been a paid user of DND artillery facilities at Gagetown, New
Brunswick, Valcartier and Nicolet, Quebec and Suffield, Alberta. (As
well, Belcan has had use of American range facilities, those of PRB
at Laulille and Matagne, Belgium, as well as various other ranges
abroad.) When asked about the nature of their access to Canadian
range facilities Janiga replied, "There is no arrangement anymore
since 1987. Today, we don't have any type of preferred access...
What we do is request access to the range and if the access is
provided for we pay the government..."
As a result of the demise of PRB in Belgium, the company's
ownership has changed and it has a future that Janiga feels in some
ways will be more productive than in the past. As he put it, "The
reorganization is already finished. Before PRB's bankruptcy, there
were several companies that looked at PRB to see if they were
interested in purchasing it. One of them at that time was GIAT
Industries Group. (GIAT is a French armaments conglomerate.) In
August of this year we got acquired by Luchaire Defence. (Luchaire
is a subsidiary of GIAT and specializes in the production of shells,
propellants and explosives.) At the same time, GIAT purchased PRB's
technology and the trademarks of PRB. There is today a new PRB, SN
(Sociιtι Nouvelle) PRB." Janiga stressed that Belcan is now 100
percent owned by Luchaire Defence and that is how it relates to the
GIAT group.
When asked if he saw a viable future for the company in
Canada in the coming decade he responded, "Yes I do, but it's a very
difficult future. I think we have a capacity to offer an independent
test and evaluation service as well as engineering development
services. We have a seasoned team of people on the test and
evaluation side. On the engineering side, although we've had to
downsize the company (five out of 15 employees, all from the
engineering department in Knowlton, Quebec), we can show a certain
expertise... Just look at our ERFB 155mm cargo round which was
developed in our premises. I'm not saying we did it all alone. We
had help, some of it from PRB. We had help from DND in terms of
range access. Nevertheless, we were the principal investigators." In
describing the product he said, "It's a round that carries dual
purpose submunitions."
On future prospects for the reborn company and any
possible niche it may find in supply of services and equipment to
DND in the coming decade Janiga said he was bringing out his crystal
ball and that it all "depends on how government policy evolves in
rapidly changing times and circumstances... Roles will be different
how different, no one knows." But Janiga points out that the
company doesn't have to "depend on DND for survival. We would like
to service DND. If 20 percent of our business came from DND, that
would be great. However, we are now part of an enormous group, GIAT
Industries. I think that they are our main clients... We ought to be
able to find our means of survival from that
client." |
Gerald Bull
When Reason Sleeps... Justice Is Badly Served
Gerald Vincent Bull 1928-1990
"A person or persons not currently known to the authorities, walked
down the hallway early in the evening of March 22, and fired five
shots..."
Who was Gerry Vincent Bull and why is his unsolved murder
in Brussels, Belgium, March 23, 1990, still a matter of national and
international mystery and intrigue. It is time to take another
look.
CURRICULUM VITAE
Born: North Bay, Ontario March 9, 1928 Father: George L. Toussaint
Bull, Solicitor Mother: Gertrude LaBrosse Bull Family: Brothers 6,
Sisters 3 Religion: Roman Catholic
Education: Regiopolis
College, Kingston, Ontario 1938 Officer's Training Class, Queen's
University 1941 University of Toronto, Engineering School
1944 Graduated 1948 Engineering Institute of Aerophysics, University
of Toronto 1948 Awarded PhD University of Toronto
1951
Employment: A.V. Roe Aircraft Co., Toronto, Ontario
1948 Canadian Armament and Research Development
Establishment Valcartier, Quebec 1951 Associate Professor, Laval
University 1953 Professor of Engineering Science, McGill
University Montreal, Quebec 1961
Marriage: Noemie (Mimi) Gilbert
July 1954 Family: Five sons, two daughters Died: Brussels, Belgium
March 23, 1990 Buried: St. Bruno, Quebec 1990
HIGHLIGHTS OF PROFESSIONAL LIFE AND INTERNATIONAL REPUTATION
At age 34 Gerry Bull was the youngest full professor ever
appointed by McGill University.
First national press coverage -
Toronto Star, 1958
An ingenious method of putting satellites into
space has been devised by a team of researchers under brilliant, Toronto
born Dr. Gerry V. Bull.
For a fraction of the money the United
States was spending on rocket launches I am certain we can put satellites
into orbit using a gun. The prospect was ideal for Canada, a rich nation
in technology but a nation with a limited budget.
Bull's arrival
at McGill University in 1961 began the start of high-profile research in
gun-launched projectiles, which would be known as the High Altitude
Research Projectile project (HARP), with a firing range located in
Bermuda.
The Canadian Government announced that funding for the
HARP project would cease as of June 30, 1967.
Bull opened
negotiations with Norwich University in Northfield, Vermont where he found
a lot of interest in continuing the HARP research project.
A
missile, weighing 170 kilograms, had reached nearly 92 kilometres, a wold
record for a gun-fired space shot. On November 18, 1966 one of Bull's
Martlet missiles was fired to a height of 180 kilometres establishing a
world record for the next twenty-five years. The record shot was achieved
at the American Army's firing project at Yuma, New Mexico.
As a
result of the U.S. Army's funding and testing of Bull's project HARP, he
became linked permanently to the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.
Enter the Bronfman family of Seagram fame and fortune in May of 1968.
Attracted by the growing potential of the HARP programme, they agreed to
purchase Norwich University's interest in HARP and privatize the
programme. Space Research Corporation was now an independent commercial
enterprise in complete control of the promising state of the art ballistic
research laboratories and workshops and the firing ranges in Bermuda and
Highwater, Quebec. Gerry Bull was appointed technical director of the
program.
Gerry Bull now had an international reputation and
ownership and control over enough missile power to start a major war. He
had a firing range in the Barbados and ownership of Big Betsy, then the
largest missile gun in the world. Intelligence agencies from every major
military power in the world were well aware of the brilliant ballistic
work of Gerald Vincent
Bull and saw the military potential of his
ballistic research and concepts. He was now seen as a major scientific
figure by Defence Departments from the Far East to Washington,
D.C.
Dr. Bull was internationally involved, as a private
consultant, in bullistic and nuclear research and weaponry to a wide range
of countries -- South Africa, the United States, China, and eventually and
possibly fatally to Iraq. Without a doubt he was now the world's leading
expert of present day and future military utilization of supergun theory
and projects.
PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL CRISIS
Gerald Vincent Bull was an extraordinary complex multi-talented man --
scientist, multi-millionaire, philosopher, prophet. In 1980 he was found
guilty by an American court of exporting munition supplies to South
Africa, in violation of then existing United States laws and United
Nations' international sanctions against South Africa's governmental
apartheid system of racial separation and discrimination. He was sentenced
to a one year jail term, with an exemption of six months, to be served at
the minimum security Allenwood Prison Camp in Montgomery, Pennsylvania.
Bull was embittered by the charges against him and the evidence provided
at the trial which he thought was false and misleading. He was under the
impression that he had been operating and working under the auspices of
the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States and had their full
cooperation and assistance in the shipment of military materials to South
Africa. He felt that he was being used as an expedient scapegoat by then
President, Jimmy Carter. Some years later he found evidence that cleared
him of these charges. He was now bankrupt, hospitalized, under psychiatric
care and confined to jail. He was released after serving four and a half
months. After a brief vacation in the Carribean with his wife Mimi he
moved immediately to Europe. He was completely disillusioned with the
governments of the United States and Canada. He flew to Paris in 1981 and
went on to Brussels where he rented a small kitchenette apartment. There
he began to build a new company as he had received several invitations
from the Chinese government to visit them in order to discuss his work.
They were interested in his HARP programme. He made an application to have
his Canadian passport renewed and was shocked and hurt to learn that his
Canadian citizenship had been revoked as Bull had previously taken on
American citizenship in Vermont which was done purely for business
reasons. The Canadian government exercised its option in this matter,
although Gerald Vincent Bull had never lived in or worked for any company
or institute in the United States. Bull wanted to retain his Canadian
citizenship and travel passport but was forced, by these circumstances, to
use his American passport.
Before leaving for Europe Bull was
quoted as saying:
"Canadian civil servants have sabotaged the
Canadian Defence industry for the last twenty-five years. The New York
City police force is about as large as the Canadian Defence Department and
far better equipped. I was proud of Canada during the Second World War,
but not now. As for the United States -- they're a gutless, confused
bunch. The United States has obsolete conventional weapons and no morale
in their Armed Forces. They could not defeat Timbuktu in a fight."
ON HIS OWN -- BRUSSELS 1981-1990
The last twenty-two years of Dr. Bull's life were engagingly successful
and driven years. His dream of designing and building a supergun now
seemed only a few shorts years away. In the late 1980's the concept of a
supergun seemed to be on everyone's lips. He was now international
recognized and held in the highest esteem by his fellow scientists and
major players in the murky governmental world of international military
economics and politics. The arms race was heating up to a feverish
pitch.
Bull was planning a gun of vast proportions and staggering
potential The barrel was designed to be 156 metres long. With the breech
and recoil mechanism fitted, the entire gun would be close to 200 metres
in length -- the bore of the barrel 1 metre wide. The breech was to be
large enough so that two men could walk around inside the space created.
The projectiles would be rocket-assisted and be powerful enough to put a
50 kilogram satellite into orbit. Bull saw his supergun as a less
expensive satellite launcher rather than a military weapon. Bull had
previously proposed such a satellite launching gun to the United States
and to NATO's top commanders -- they both elected to wait for future
developments in Gerald Bull's programme of a supergun satellite launcher.
No matter what Bull told everyone about his concept of a supergun being
build exclusively as a less expensive method of launching satellites,
there were those who continued to declare it to be a weapon of such
fearful destructive potential that it would upset the balance of power in
the Middle East. They were certain to use this distorted propaganda to
further their international agendas. In Iraq's case, they needed an
economical method of launching their own spy satellite into space in order
to compete with Israel's then operational spy satellite.
His life
in Brussels was one of unrelenting work involving both negotiations for
potential contracts and the necessary scientific research and design work.
In early months of 1990 Gerry Bull began to notice that someone had been
entering his apartment while he was away working at his office or on a
trip out of the country. Nothing was taken and no money every stolen, but
whoever the intruders were they left behind clear evidence that they had
been there. Also his luggage was beginning to be often "lost" at the
airports he used in his travels around Europe, Asia and the Middle East.
This became such a problem that he was forced to carry extra underwear and
toiletry items in his carry on bags. His luggage was always "found" a day
or two later and sent to him wherever he was staying. He could only
conclude that the C.I.A., M16 or Mossad, or all three had gone through his
things while his luggage was officially designated as "lost." All of this
hassle and harassment came with the territory, his advisors and friends
assured him -- there was nothing unusual in these methods for anyone as
well known as Bull in the military arms business. He had suspected for
some time that his telephones were tapped and that his mail was being
tampered with. His last apartment "warning" was shortly before he was
murdered. He returned home to find that his furniture had been rearranged
and his set of drinking glasses has been replaced by another set of
glasses which he found in his kitchen cupboard. Now everyone advised him
to take these signs seriously and to discuss these matters with the police
and his closest friends and advisors. Bull disregarded their advice as he
knowingly believed that if these people wanted him out of the way there
was nothing he could do to stop them. A more serious and troubling message
was received in a letter from Luis Palacio, a vice president of Space
Research Corporation and a long-time friend and associate for the past
thirty years. Luis told Bull that a Palestinian contact, who had
connections with a well known international arms dealer, told him that the
Israelis had decided to eliminate Dr. Gerald Bull. They would use people
who could not be traced back to them in Israel.
At this same time
Gerry Bull's apartment manager had accepted a deposit from two men with
strong foreign accents, who wished to rent an apartment in the Cherrideau
area of Brussels. They supplied him with references and asked that a
rental lease be drawn up. They told him that they would return to sign it
but in the meantime they wanted to have a set of keys for the apartment
and for the front security entrance door in order to work on the apartment
redecoration. He gave them the keys. They never returned and their
references proved to be a list of fictious names and addresses.
DEATH IN BRUSSELS
The 22nd day of March 1990, the first day of Spring, was a cold wet day
in Brussels. Gerald Bull was a weary man when he prepared to leave his
office that night shortly after seven in the evening. He had plans to have
dinner that night with a friend, Helen Gregoire. After continually
travelling for the past few weeks, he was looking forward to spending a
quiet evening having dinner with Helen. He was now 62 and found
travelling, with its steady diet of airports, air planes, business
meetings, and hotel living an exhausting experience. His secretary Monique
Jamine offered to drive him home. She stopped at a local bakery to buy a
loaf of bread which he needed. Over his right shoulder he carried, as
always, his large black canvas bag which contained all his important
documents and papers. Bull left the car when they arrived at his apartment
and walked to the entrance door. Monique watched from the driveway as Bull
let himself in and walked to the waiting elevators. He took an elevator to
his apartment which was number 20 on the sixth floor. A short time later
Helen Gregoire discovered his body lying in a heap in his apartment
doorway when she arrived to meet him. She screamed thinking he had a heart
attack. Her scream was heard by a downstairs neighbour who ran to see what
the trouble was. They then telephoned for an ambulance. Gerald Vincent
Bull was dead, shot five times. On the carpet under his head were large
blood stains. The police were then notified.
The Brussel's police
issued the following statement:
A person or persons not currently
known to the authorities, walked down the hallway early in the evening of
March 22, 1990 and fired five shots from a silenced pistol, into a
Canadian businessman who was about to open his apartment door. The body of
Dr. Gerald V. Bull was still warm when the horrified woman who was to have
dinner that night found him scant minutes later. The killer or killers,
left behind a corpse with $US20,000 dollars in its pockets.
This
still unsolved murder sparked a series of sensational stories by the
global media about a cannon so gigantic that could shoot a missile around
the world. A newspaper obituary covered Gerald Bull's life with these few
words:
"Born in 1928 into a large Catholic family in North Bay,
Ontario. He was a child of the depression. When his mother died in 1931,
his father sent him to live with a relative, who later placed him in a
Jesuit College."
Doctor Gerald Vincent Bull was buried in St.
Bruno, Quebec in April of 1990. His headstone is inscribed; When reason
sleeps, Justice is badly served.
A LICENCE TO MURDER
"We don't know for sure who killed my father. But among the things that
I find very hurtful is that the media seems to think that if the Israelis
were responsible and if they killed him because he was working for Iraq,
then it's okay. In other words, that they had some kind of right to do it.
Now if the Arabs had killed an American or Canadian citizen, for whatever
reason, there would have been outrage and there would have been inquiries
and investigations. The Americans, the Canadians, have done nothing to
solve my father's murder. It is as if Ottawa and Washington have
sanctioned the killing. If that is true, then it stinks. No one had the
right to shoot my father in the back."
Michel Bull
Michel Bull says that -- the media seems to think that if the
Israelis were responsible and if they killed him because he was working
for Iraq, then it's okay. In other words that they had some kind of right
to do it.
Is Gerald Bull's son correct in his suspicions about the
reporting on the fatal shooting of his father? This observation on his
part seems to imply that certain nations and certain governments have been
granted the right to eliminate anyone not in harmony with their
ideologies, their programmes and their national and international
ambitions. Did Gerald Bull not have the right to live out his normal
natural life and did not his family have the right to have their husband,
father and friend with them until such time that he would die from natural
causes? Do not the citizens of Canada deserve to have their right to life
protected and safeguarded by their own country? In the case of murder, do
not Governments have the duty and the responsibility to bring the
murderers to justice?
Who are these assassins? -- are they demented
anarchists or mere employees of clandestine, treacherous governmental
agencies. There was no reason whatever for any enraged radical to plan and
carry out Gerald Bull's death. There can be no doubt it was someone
recruited and paid by a government which had much to gain and little to
lose by putting the fatal "hit" on Dr. Bull that evening in Brussels. Only
three or four countries come to mind when one considers the motive needed
to cause such an international scandal and worldwide publicity, unless
they had previously engaged themselves in other terrorist assassinations
and found that they came away from it without any harm to their national
and international reputations. World Judicial Courts, charged with
enforcing International Law, have shown themselves to be without any legal
position or influence in the Gerald Bull case. Given this laissez-faire
judicial scenario, the assassins and the assassinators have obtained an
international licence to kill. Gerald Bull's death has become a classic
example of international, see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. Too
many questions can spoil the whole political, economic and political
agenda of international arrangements. Let Evil be! This may be the best
policy when dealing with lawless nations and governments. The lack of
proper and thorough inquiry and investigation into the Bull murder by the
governments of Belgium, Canada, Israel, and the United States can be seen
as an arms length sanctioning and approval of the "hit" by person, or
persons unknown to the authorities.
The assassin or assassins,
whoever they may be, may by this time also be the victim of an untimely
accidental death. They know too much and will be seen as the weak link in
the brutal chain of command. The main perpetrators of this crime remain
above board, duly elected democratic pillars of society, with
international fame and honours to their credit. They stand erect before
inter-governmental bodies and international organizations and lecture the
world, without any hint of apology, self recrimination, doubt or shame.
They remain mute and claim no explanation or knowledge for the untimely
death of Dr. Gerald Bull.
From the assassinations of Julius Caesar
44 B.C., Thomas Beckett 1170, and Abraham Lincoln 1865, to our own
troubled and eventful times, this devious method of eliminating political
foes and trouble-makers, who may threaten the present regime with its deep
dark secrets, has been the favourite tool of silencing voices which
threaten positions of power and influence.
A notable few who have
paid the supreme price at the hand of an assassin -- Archduke Franz
Ferdinand 1914; Benito Mussolini 1945; Mahatma Gandhi 1948; Indira Gandhi
1984; John F. Kennedy 1963; Robert F. Kennedy 1968; Martin Luther King,
Jr. 1968; Anwar Sadat 1981; Aldo Moro 1978; John Lennon 1980; Malcolm X
(Malcolm Little) 1965; Oscar A. Romero 1980; Lee Harvey Oswald 1963;
Yitzhak Rabin 1995; General Renι Schneider 1970; Dr. Salvador Allende
1973; Six Jesuit Priests and two women housekeepers, El Salvador 1989.
Each of these reprehensible fatal deeds were planned, authorized and
executed by a person or persons known or unknown, who see themselves and
their agendas as a law unto themselves, not subject to any sovereign,
humanistic or natural law. In their own judgement of things they had the
right to possess or to issue a licence to kill. They decide who lives and
who dies. They robe themselves both as judges and executioners in their
cloistered rooms of deliberation and agendas.
Michel Bull's
further comments:
The Americans, and the Canadians, have done
nothing to solve my father's murder. It is as if Ottawa and Washington
have sanctioned the killing. If this is true, then it stinks. No one had
the right to shoot my father in the back.
If Michel's charges are
accurate, then this whole tragic episode is a sad and somewhat frightening
commentary on the motives of both governments and their citizens. The one
logical conclusion which can be drawn from reading Michel's comments and
suspicious is the likelihood that further investigation is not needed as
the killer or killers and their employer or employers are known. They know
who ordered and organized the hit on Doctor Gerald Vincent Bull, March 22,
1990, Brussels, Belgium. A new modern and dangerous, Murder Incorporated
has been born and given a licence.
In his last conversation with
officials from Iraq, Stephen Bull, Gerry Bull's third son, was told that
their intelligence said his father had been shot by agents of Israel's
Mossad. They also believed that Israel's political leaders would not
sanction that action without consulting American political leaders as Dr.
Gerald Vincent Bull was then legally an American Citizen.
Michel
and Stephen liquidated the assets of their father's Space Research
Corporation and settled its accounts. They closed the Brussels office
shortly after Dr. Bull's burial. While clearing out Dr. Bull's office,
Michel found a page of company notepaper on his father's desk. In his own
handwriting Gerry Bull had written, as best as he could recall, the words
of "The Canticle of Brother Sun" a prayer chant written by St. Francis of
Assisi in 1225. Gerald Bull ended his version of the canticle with these
words "Blessed are they who live in peace."
Note: Two excellent
publications detailing the life of Gerald Bull, his work and his
death.
Arms and the Man Dr. Gerald Bull, Iraq and the
Supergun Author: William Lowther @ 1991 by Author Publisher:
Doubleday Canada Limited, Toronto, Ontario ISBN:
0-385-25287-0
Wilderness of Mirrors Author: Dale Grant @ 1991 by
Author Publisher: Prentice-Hall Inc. Englewood Cliffs, New
Jersey ISBN: 0-13-959438-8
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