Robert Nairac

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Robert Nairac was a British officer serving in Northern Ireland, when he was killed on 14 May 1977. He was abducted and killed by the IRA while visiting a bar in South Armagh.[1].

Special Reconnaissance Unit

Some years after his death, former Army intelligence officer Fred Holroyd made a number of allegations about Nairac's activities.

He was keen and brave , if a little rash, but totally committed to the war against the terrorists. However, there was another side to Robert that I was to learn about. The unit he was involved with, with the cover title '4 Field Survey Troop, Royal Engineers' was located at Castle Dillon with a genuine engineer regiment. It had a second level of cover as 'Northern Ireland Training and Tactics Team' (NITAT).[2]

Holroyd elaborated on Nairac's role in an unpublished letter to the Guardian:

4 Field Survey Troop, Royal Engineers does not appear on the official list of Sapper units in Ulster for the three years mentioned. This is not surprising as the title was the first layer of cover which hid the fact that it was an SAS Troop. It's two Officers Commanding in my time were both infantry officers currently serving in 22 SAS Regiment, the second of these was Captain Julian (Tony) Ball, KOSB. His 2i/c was Captain Robert Nairac. The CSM, NCO's and operational members were either former, serving or recently trained SAS personnel.[3]

Liam Clarke describes Nairac's role as follows:

The official job of the former Oxford boxing blue and Grenadier Guard was liaison officer between Bessbrook military base and covert organisations such as the SAS and RUC Special Branch. Nairac had spent some time training with the SAS and was a founder member of a related covert intelligence unit known as the Det.[4]

John Francis Green

Holroyd claimed in his book War Without Honour that Nairac admitted to him his involvement in the killing of IRA man John Francis Green in the Republic, and gave him a photograph of Green's body which Holroyd turned over to the RUC. Holroyd also stated that ballistic evidence linked the Green killing with the Miami Showband massacre, and with a group of loyalists linked to a group of loyalists who would later become known as the Glennane Gang.[5]

Notes

  1. David McKittrick, Seamus Kelters, Brian Feeney, Chris Thornton and David McVea, Lost Lives, Mainstream Publishing, 2004, p. 722
  2. Fred Holroyd, War Without Honour, Medium Publishing, 1989, p47.
  3. Letter from Fred Holroyd to The Guardian, Lobster magazine, Issue 16, June 1998.
  4. Liam Clarke, Murdered maverick Robert Nairac showed how to beat the IRA, Sunday Times, 25 May 2008.
  5. Fred Holroyd, War Without Honour, Medium Publishing, 1989, p47.