Saturday, 2 August 2025

Hispanidad: The relationship between El Jefe and El Caudillo

Fidel Castro Ruz (left) and Francisco Franco Bahamonde.

It was ironic that Francoist Spain enjoyed good relations with Castroist Cuba.

Francisco Franco was more concerned in promoting the concept of Hispanidad -forging close relations with Spanish-speaking and Spanish-descended nations to combat the Anglosphere- than following a strictly anti-communist foreign policy.

So when Castro's left-wing government was ostracized by the United States through diplomatic isolation and a trade embargo Franco, who headed a right-wing authoritarian regime since he led the Nationalists to victory in the Spanish Civil War, refused to join in the U.S.-led sanctions.

A song by Carlos Puebla titled Saludo a España celebrated Cuban gratitude to Spain.

It is worth noting that both Castro and Franco were kinsmen of sorts. Castro's father had migrated to Cuba from Galicia, the north western region of Spain where Franco was born. Castro visited his ancestral home of Galicia in 1992 when he attended the 2nd Ibero-American Summit in Madrid - his only official visit to Spain.

Both men never met.

Franco died in 1975 and Castro in 2016.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2025).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.





Wednesday, 30 July 2025

CrossTalk | "Trump’s Escalation" | Broadcast on RT on Wednesday, July 30th, 2025

My latest appearance on CrossTalk the flagship programme of RT. 

The topic was “Trump’s Escalation”. 

Preamble:

"Trump has the habit of suddenly changing his mind. His 50-day ultimatum directed at Russia to end the Ukraine conflict is now up in the air. Why the change is anyone’s guess. However, it is fair to assume Trump wants to divert attention from his transparency problems."

CrossTalking with Adeyinka Makinde, Daniel Lazare, and Drago Bosnic.

It was recorded on Tuesday, July 29th, 2023, and broadcast the following day.

CrossTalk: "Trump’s Escalation"

RT

Rumble

Audio

© RT (2025).



Wednesday, 23 July 2025

A warning from history: Goethe and the folly of German militarism


"As for (German Chancellor) Mr. Merz, he has repeatedly said amusing things, including that his main goal is to once again make Germany the leading military power in Europe. He didn't even choke on the word 'again'."
-Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, July 11th, 2025.

On Wednesday, May 14th, 2025, the German Chancellor Friedrch Merz made a statement in the Bundestag asserting that he was intent on transforming the Bundeswehr into “the strongest European army”. But while this policy announcement was welcomed by the United States administration led by Donald Trump which insists that its European partners within NATO take on more of the burden in military spending, as well as by most of the political leaders in the EU who remain steadfast in their resolve to weaken and destroy the Russian state, others, not least the government of the Russian Federation, have responded with concern. Fears that a militarisation of the German mindset would likely accompany the implementation of the Merz plan are not without foundation given the end results of two eras of German rearmament during the 20thcentury. Both disasters were foretold by the German polymath Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.

In his time Goethe had a relationship with the German people which transcended a reverence for his literary genius. As was the case with many other giants of German culture who operated in the spheres of philosophy, literature, poetry, art and music, he was greatly inclined to examine the German soul.

A defining point in his relationship with his people came at the time of the War of Liberation in the early 19th century when Napoleon Bonaparte was reeling from the defeat of the Grande Armée in Russia. A coalition of armies which included the German states of Austria, Prussia, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Hanover, Bavaria, Saxony and Wurttemberg took up arms to expel the French.

But Goethe, a child of the Enlightenment and an admirer of Napoleon who he believed embodied Enlightenment values, remained indifferent and cautioned his people about their embrace of nationalism and militarism. He felt that Germans could not be trusted to exercise restraint and rationality when energised by military ambition because of what he understood to be the psyche of a landlocked, 'claustrophobic' people. If they were stimulated to compete with other powers in the arena of international politics and war, they would, Goethe reasoned, seek to extend their frontiers and become embroiled in militaristic endeavours that would lead to overreach and eventual, predictable disaster.

Thus, Goethe called on Germans to invest in "culture and the spirit". What he meant by this was that they should focus on conquering the world with their talents across the spectrum of music, philosophy, commerce and the sciences.

But his people were uncomprehending. They interpreted his anti-nationalist stance and renunciation of war as a form of betrayal. Goethe himself felt aggrieved at their lack of understanding which also negatively impacted on the well-being of his family.  August, his only child to survive to adulthood suffered from the accusation of cowardice because his father took steps to discourage him from undertaking military service.

Goethe was seemingly proven wrong when four decades after his death the rise of Prussia provided the impetus for the near total unification of the German-speaking people, and the creation of the German Empire at the time of the defeat of France in the Franco-Prussian War of 1871. But the subsequent destruction of Germany in two consecutive world wars during the 20th century provided strong validation of Goethe’s fears.

These fears persisted after the Second World War. The Morgenthau Plan, which was drawn up in the latter stages of the war but later abandoned, proposed to de-militarise and de-industrialise those parts of Germany that would come under Allied control. Although the West created the Bundeswehr and incorporated it into NATO, Lord Ismay’s often quoted raison d’être for the North Atlantic Alliance being “to keep the Soviet Union out, the Americans in and the Germans down” reflected the belief among its European allies of the necessity of having German military power circumscribed.

Still later, the British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher opposed German reunification because she believed that Germany would not continue to accept the Oder-Niesse line as the border between Germany and Poland.

The present aspiration to build a powerful army is set against the backdrop of a NATO-backed proxy war which pits Ukraine against Russia. In addition to the anti-Russian sanctions regime in which Germany has participated as an EU member state, the Germans have provided the Ukrainian military with weapons and equipment including Leopard tanks. In 2024, several senior officers of the Bundeswehr including the head of the Luftwaffe were recorded discussing potential attacks in Crimea including one directed at the Kerch Strait Bridge.

Belligerent remarks by the German Minister of Defence Boris Pistorius and Chancellor Merz have rattled the Russians. Pistorius claimed that German troops were ready to kill Russian soldiers “if deterrence doesn’t work and Russia attacks”, while Merz told the Bundestag in July that the “means of diplomacy are exhausted.” And further to the announcement of plans to increase the German military budget to 153 billion by 2029 was a call for a national debate on the introduction of universal conscription by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

This state of affairs has led to a decision by Russia in July 2025 to withdraw from the military-technical agreement it signed with Germany in 1996.

Today, there are few German philosophers who examine the German soul as did the likes of Goethe, Friedrich Holderlin, Heinrich Heine, Thomas Mann and others. Indeed, Thea Dorn (the pseudonym of Christiane Scherer), who co-wrote Die deutsche Seele (The German Soul) in 2011, bemoaned the present day lack of German thinkers soon after the publication of her book.

Yet, one need not rely on philosophical prognosis to understand the implications of Foreign Minister Lavrov’s comments in May 2025 about Germany’s direct involvement in the prosecution of the Russia-Ukraine conflict when he warned that “Germany is sliding down the same slippery slope it already followed a couple of times in the last century.”

© Adeyinka Makinde (2025).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.

Thursday, 17 July 2025

About Major Salim Hatum: The Druze army officer who helped shape Syrian politics during the 1960s

Captain Salim Hatum of the Syrian Army.

Salim Hatum was a Druze military officer and member of the Ba'athist Party who played a prominent role in Syrian politics in the 1960s.

Born in the village of Dhibin in Sweida in 1934, he enrolled at Homs Military Academy in 1955 and was commissioned a Lieutenant in 1957.

He was a key participant in the coup which overthrew Lieutenant General Amin al-Hafiz on February 23rd, 1966. Hatoum, who was the Commander of the Thunderbolt Battalion, secured key radio and television buildings where he read out Statement No. 1: his announcement that the Ba'ath Party had overthrown the military regime and the proclamation of a state of emergency.

He was promoted to Major and became part of the ruling Military Committee.

Prior to the coup, he was the Commander of a commando unit and added to this the command of the army garrisons situated near to radio and television stations. However, Hatum felt that he was not properly rewarded for his role in the coup and sought to overthrow the regime nominally headed by President Nureddin al-Atassi whose deputy, General Salah Jadid was effectively the power behind the throne. 

But the insurrection which he began in the Druze heartland (Hatum detained both al-Atassi and Jadid in Suwayda and considered executing both) was put down by air and ground action organised by Air Force Major General Hafez Assad, the future long-term leader of Syria. 

Hatum fled to Jordan where King Hussein gave him refuge. Back home in March 1967 he was convicted of treason and sentenced to death in absentia.

Hatum returned to Syria in June 1967 just after the end of the Six Day Way. He had made a statement published in the Lebanese An-Nahar newspaper that he was returning to fight the Israelis and may have thought that the defeat by Israel had weakened the government to the extent that they would ignore the death sentence handed down against him. However, he was apprehended and the death sentence confirmed by the Supreme State Security Court.

Major Hatum was executed by firing squad in the early hours of June 24th, 1967 at the Mezzeh Military Prison.

N.B.

. Hatum had been friends with "Kamel Amin Thaabet", the character played by Mossad spy Eli Cohen. He sat as part of the panel of officers of the Special Military Court which tried and convicted Cohen of espionage.

. Hatum's disagreement with his colleagues after the overthrow of Lieutenant General Hafiz was set against the backdrop of sectarian tensions within the Ba'athist movement between Alawite officers on the one hand, and those like Hatum who were of Druze origin. In Jordan he told a press conference that Alawites outnumbered non-Alawites by five to one in the Syrian Army. This, he argued, perverted the Ba'athist motto of "One Arab nation with an eternal message" to that of "One Nusayri state with an eternal message", Nusayri being a derogatory word for Alawite.

. Both Jadid and Assad considered Hatum to be reckless when charged with arresting Hafiz during the coup in February because of the amount of property damage caused and mass casualties sustained.

. Hatum is also spelt as "Hatoum".

© Adeyinka Makinde (2025).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.

Tuesday, 15 July 2025

Royal Nigerian Navy anti-smuggling operations on the high seas in the words of Captain James Rawe

Images: Lieutenant Commander James Rawe pictured in 1958; Map depicting the area between the mouth of the Cross River Estuary and the Island of Fernando Po; and Royal Nigerian Navy Masthead Pendant.

James Rawe, a veteran of the Normandy landings during the Second World War, was a Royal Navy officer who later played an important role in the development of the Nigerian Navy. Although a specialist in the field of hydrography, he went on the perform the duties of a combat and staff officer, the former of which led him to plan the amphibious landings during the Nigerian Civil War. He was also charged with organising traditional naval routines geared to maintaining organisational discipline, morale and cohesion. His earlier role as a sea captain had not been confined to that of a survey vessel named Penelope. He was given charge of HMNS Nigeria, an Algerine-class frigate which had served the Royal Navy as HMS Hare, a minesweeper, during the Second World War. This ship did not only participate in ceremonies associated with visiting dignitaries, but was also, under Rawe, charged with policing Nigeria’s territorial waters in the cause of disrupting smuggling activities emanating from neighbouring Cameroon and the then Spanish-controlled island of Fernando Po.

James Rawe: “HMNS Nigeria was ordered to take over from some smaller craft on the anti-smuggling patrol between the Cross River and Fernando Po, a Spanish Island in the Bight of Biafra. We picked up the smugglers on radar, started an ARL (Average Run Length) plot and when in range, fired a star shell to illuminate the area. These new methods came as a shock to the smugglers, and we captured huge quantities of contraband and took many prisoners. The Spanish navy seemed a bit upset by our activities, as they were taking place on the high seas, as opposed to Nigerian territorial waters and this was not strictly legal. The Spanish sent out a frigate, which ... illuminated us with her searchlight. I responded by sounding action stations and invited them to identify themselves. Possibly seeing our larger gun, they switched off their searchlight, replied "Spanish Warship" and headed back to Fernando Po.”

-Excerpt from That Reminds Me, the privately published memoir of Captain James Rawe.

James Rawe was born on July 14th, 1925. He died on April 15th, 2023.

Captain James Rawe - Obituary

© Adeyinka Makinde (2025).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England. He is the author of the article "The Bonny Landing: The anatomy of Black Africa’s first amphibious operation, July to September 1967", published in the August 2024 edition of The Mariner's Mirror, the international journal of the Society for Nautical Research.

Sunday, 29 June 2025

“Die wilde Jagd” and the prophesized rise of Hitler

Die wilde Jagd by Franz, Ritter Von Stuck (1889).

The painting Die wilde Jagd (The Wild Chase), a work in the symbolism genre by Franz Stuck, depicts the German god Wotan (Odin) on horseback leading a spectral procession in a seemingly frenzied pursuit.

In Germanic and Norse mythology Wotan doubles as a god of war who received soldiers who died in the battlefield in Valhalla, and as a hunter who embodied the ability to control life, death and the elemental forces of nature.

It has often been remarked that the central figure in Stuck’s work bears an uncanny resemblance to Adolf Hitler who was born in 1889, the year the painting was completed.

And it is claimed that Hitler, who first saw the painting as a 13-year-old, modelled his adult appearance on Wotan’s depiction.

Von Stuck became his favourite painter.

A great believer in providence, Hitler often spoke of his coming to power, his survival from assassination attempts and his military victories as manifestations of his worldly destiny.

Some believe that Stuck’s painting prophesized the rise of Hitler. Mythology had a deep-seated hold on the German psyche, and this formed the basis of many examinations and prognostications by its philosophers, musicians and writers.

For instance, Heinrich Heine, the German poet and thinker, felt that the Christian religion only kept a tenuous lid on the darker aspects of the German soul. He feared that the veneer of relative German pacifism could be broken by the rise of a Germanic demagogue-thinker who would be able to use his primitive powers to summon up the demonic forces of German pantheism.

He was perhaps like Stuck’s painting prophesizing the rise of Adolf Hitler.

NB.


. Stuck was ennobled in 1906
. He died on August 30th, 1928, at the age of 65
. He is buried in the Munich Waldfriedhof
. Die wilde Jagd resides at the Lenbachhaus Museum in Munich

© Adeyinka Makinde (2025).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.

Saturday, 28 June 2025

Frederick Forsyth, The Dogs of War and a New Territory for Biafra

The English writer Frederick Forsyth who died recently had a close association with the civil war fought in Nigeria between federal and secessionist protagonists from 1967 to 1970. At first, he started off as an observing journalist, covering the conflict as he had done Cold War politics as a Reuters news reporter earlier in the 1960s. His coverage of the famous attempt on the life of French President Charles de Gaulle at Petit-Clamart in 1962 by the renegade O.A.S. inspired his breakthrough novel The Day of the Jackal. It was initially thought that a subsequent novel The Dogs of War, which was published in 1974, was a composite of his observations of European mercenaries he had encountered as a freelance reporter in Biafra. But the suicide of a former mercenary four years later after a siege in London’s East End unearthed a fascinating story which provided a more accurate source of the book’s inspiration. This was that Forsyth had financed an attempt to overthrow an African dictator through a mercenary force. Moreover, the plot of the novel appeared to insinuate the extraordinary motive of resurrecting the fallen state of Biafra on an island in the Gulf of Guinea and replacing the overthrown dictator with Biafra’s exiled leader Chukwuemeka Ojukwu.

The Siege

The discovery of Frederick Forsyth’s alleged role in masterminding a plot to overthrow the government of Francisco Marcias Nguema, the dictator of the West Central African state of Equatorial Guinea, began on the Saturday afternoon of March 11th, 1978. Two nine-year-old girls had been invited to play a game of “truth or dare” in a small bedsitter in Goldsmith Row in the East End district of Bethnal Green. While inside the girls had been horrified to have seen a gun. They reported this to the police who sent two officers to interview the tenant, 43-year-old Alan Murphy.

Detective Constables Ernie Pawley and Russell Dunlop were walking up Roman Road in the company of the girls when Murphy was spotted in a car. They approached him and told him they wanted to search his flat. Murphy consented and was cooperative until Dunlop began rummaging through a bottom drawer. He placed his left hand on Dunlop’s shoulder and said: “This is far enough.” Dunlop looked up to find Murphy pointing a Mauser pistol at his head.

Both constables immediately sought to reason with Murphy. Dunlop, who was on one knee, asked Murphy of he could sit on the floor, but Murphy chillingly replied: “No, this is it. This is the end. I’m going to kill you and, then him, then I will probably kill myself.”

Thirty seconds elapsed when as Murphy began to pull back the gun catch, Pawley, who was standing three feet away, dived at him. Murphy adjusted himself and at point blank range fired at Pawley, injuring him in the chest. Dunlop scrambled out of the room as Murphy fired several shots which missed. He then turned his attention to Pawley who had crumpled to the floor. He shot once but missed and the heavily bleeding Pawley was able to crawl his way out of the room, tumbling down a set of stairs to make good his escape. Murphy continued firing at them and miraculously missed.

Dunlop reported the incident and within minutes the road was cordoned off and a siege commenced by 50 policemen who were backed by the anti-terrorist squad who brought with them a large quantity of heavy artillery. But there was no further shooting. Nor was the standard tactic of police calling for the surrender of the gunman through a loudhailer. More than an hour passed when a gunshot was heard. The police burst in and found Murphy lying in a pool of blood. He had shot himself in the heart.

The Anatomy of a Coup Plot

In the ensuing investigation the police discovered that Murphy, known locally as a delivery driver and described by one neighbour as “very quiet and softly spoken”, had been a professional mercenary. He had served as a “dog of war” in several theatres which included the Congo and Biafra.

While as was expected, the police found a cache of guns and ammunition in the bedsit, it was the unearthing of a trove of documents which included a diary of Murphy’s mercenary exploits in Africa and many letters, which startled. One of the letters from Forsyth revealed the connection between Forsyth and a coup plot which had germinated in 1972.

But while the plot was centred on engineering the overthrow of the Nguema regime in Equatorial Guinea, its motivation led back to Forsyth’s association with the short-lived secessionist Republic of Biafra.

Forsyth was sent by the BBC to cover the troubles in Nigeria which led to the secession of the Eastern region of the country under the leadership of the region’s military governor Lieutenant Colonel Chukwuemeka Ojukwu. It is claimed that the BBC found Forsyth’s reporting to be biased towards the secessionist side, and he was recalled to London. Soon after, Forsyth resigned his position and returned to Biafra as a freelance journalist.

While in Biafra Forsyth became close to Ojukwu and also got to know many of the mercenaries who fought for the Biafran’s including Rolf Steiner, the German ex-French Foreign Legionnaire who commanded the Biafran 4th Commando Brigade. Steiner’s observations of Forsyth made him reach the conclusion that Forsyth was working for the British state. He said the following in an interview:

Forsyth was clever and discreet. He kept his distance from visiting colleagues. He went wherever Ojukwu went and was familiar with all of Biafra’s political and military problems.

Steiner proved to be correct. In 2015, Forsyth admitted that he had been an “asset” of the British Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, from 1968 to 1988. While British foreign policy outwardly supported the Federal side, it was keeping a close look at the Biafran side whose initial territory covered much of Nigeria’s oil-rich areas. Forsyth proselytised the Biafra cause through newspaper articles, television interviews and a Penguin book titled The Biafra Story, which was published in June 1969, seven months before the collapse of Biafra.

But Biafra’s capitulation apparently failed to dampen Forsyth’s hope for a revived Biafran state. A few short months after his return from Biafra in 1970, Forsyth was in a small flat in Camden, north London, already plotting the coup which he hoped would provide a new homeland for the Biafrans. Along with Alexander Ramsay Gay, a Scottish bank clerk turned mercenary who he had met in Biafra, he decided that the designated homeland would be the island of Fernando Po, a part of Equatorial Guinea which Nguema based himself.

Fernando Po (now Bioko), which is 100 kilometres off the coast of Nigeria, had functioned as a staging point for flights to and from Biafra. It also had a large population of Igbos, the dominant ethnic group of Biafra, who since the 1920s when it was under Spanish colonial control had come to the island as contract labour on its coffee, cocoa and timber plantations.

The major hurdle which Forsyth and Gay faced, that of finance, was removed when sales of The Day of The Jackal made Forsyth a millionaire. In Spring of 1972, Forsyth requested that Gay embark for Fernando Po on a reconnoitring mission. Gay obtained a visa to Cameroon and flew to the island’s capital Santa Isabel (now Malabo) where he explored possible landing sites and scrutinised the amount of defences around what was often referred to as Nguema’s palace, but which in fact was the old Spanish colonial governor’s mansion.

When he got back to Forsyth, by now a tax exile who divided his residences between Ireland and Spain, Gay informed him that a dozen mercenaries backed by 40 to 50 former Biafran soldiers could take the island. The operation he estimated would cost approximately $80,000. Gay then proceeded to sorting out the preliminaries: acquiring false passports, opening bank accounts, contriving fake end-user’s certificates and searching for arms dealers. Gay had two passports issued in the names of Greaves and Muir. They were based on death certificates in the style that Forsyth had written into the storyline of The Day of the Jackal. He used the name Henry George Greaves to open a bank account number 47009081/93 at the Kreditbank, Ostend.

Gay then proceeded to Hamburg where an arms dealer agreed to supply arms including Belgian-made automatic rifles, light machine guns, mortars, bazookas and other arms which would be released to him in Spain by an official of the Spanish Ministry of Defence who was bribed. The end-user certificate which indicated that the arms were destined for Iraq was signed by an Iraqi diplomat who was also bribed. Gay paid the arms dealer a deposit of 120,000 Deutschmarks ($32,000) as the first of several instalments. He also left a telephone number for his principal, named as “Mr. Van Cleef” whom the arms dealer could contact in case of any problem. “Van Cleef” was the pseudonym for Forsyth who was identified in Murphy’s diary as having been present at meetings with the arms dealer in Hamburg.

Gay’s next objective was to bring together a group of gunmen, a sea vessel and a workable plan. He hired 13 mercenaries: nine French and Belgian; three Englishmen and a Hungarian. One of the Englishmen was Murphy. A converted 64-foot fishing vessel named the Albatross was found in the Spanish resort of Fuengirola and Gay chartered it for three months at a cost of $3,200 per month. The reason given to the owner was that it was to be used for an oil survey expedition off the coast of Africa.

The chronology of the plan to seize the island would, Gay envisioned, start in the middle of December when the arms would be sent from Madrid to Malaga where they would be loaded onto the Albatross. And after obtaining further supplies and equipment at Gibraltar, it would sail on to the Cape Verde Islands where fresh food and water would be purchased. Then it would journey around West Africa and stop at Cotonou, Dahomey (now Republique de Benin), the embarkation point of the 50 Biafran veterans. From here the vessel would time its arrival at Fernando Po for the dead of night.

The amphibious assault, consisting of all the mercenaries and half of the Biafrans, would proceed to the landing site on motorised dinghies with silent motors. The force would then scale a low cliff before heading to the president’s mansion where the presidential guard would be eliminated. Once inner sanctum of the mansion was penetrated, Nguema was to be assassinated. The communique announcing the overthrow of Don Francisco Marcias would express regret at either his “accidental death” or his “suicide.”

Success would guarantee a bonus payment of $30,000. This would partly compensate for a “no looting” policy, but Gay planned to ransom the contents of the Soviet embassy to the CIA for one million dollars.

But things did not go to plan.

Although advised to keep a low profile, the mercenaries, who had begun to arrive in southern Spain in late October 1972, stood out from the usual crowd of tourists. It was reported that one of the mercenaries was spotted walking around the deck of the Albatross while dressed in military fatigues. Suspicions regarding the true nature of the enterprise were raised by the cargo being loaded which included three landing craft, over 10,000 litres of diesel fuel, and 75 army uniforms. Weaponry such as light machine guns, bazookas and mortars, along with ten tons of ammunition were smuggled from Yugoslavia to the port of Valencia where they were stored in a dockside warehouse before being transferred to Las Palmas in the Canary Island where the cargo would be loaded onto the Albatross.

Then in the second week of December, Gay’s plans began to unravel. The corrupt Spanish official refused to issue the arms export licence because the Albatross was a private, wooden-hulled craft and not a freighter. So when the vessel arrived at Malaga on December 16th, 1972, there were no arms to load. Also, the arms dealer who had bribed the Spaniard refused to refund Forsyth’s down payment.

Not giving up, Gay arranged for the Albatross to sail down to Lanzarote in the Canary Islands while he travelled to Hamburg to arrange for the arms to leave Spain by another route so that the Albatross could be loaded at sea. But this was to no avail. He returned to the Canaries on January 15th, 1973, and informed the mercenaries that the operation would be abandoned for the time being. The next day, orders were sent from Madrid to the Policia Canaria to seize the Albatross and arrest all the mercenaries on board.

The unravelling of the mission had been the handiwork of the British Special Branch, the famed counter-terrorism unit which had been formed in 1883. Its officers had been tracking Gay’s activities because they were fearful that the arms shipment he had been arranging was destined for one of the paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland. When they discovered its actual purpose, they tipped off their Spanish counterparts.

The Spanish authorities initially based the arrests on drugs offences which did not stick. Disinterested in mounting an investigation into the coup plot, they decided to put each mercenary on a plane flight back to his homeland. Gay was questioned by Spain’s equivalent of the Special Branch but allowed to leave for Paris.

The operation had ended before it begun.

The Dogs of War and Biafra

In April 1972, Forsyth told the London Evening Standard that he would be flying off to “West Africa and then on to South Africa to research for his new thriller The Dogs of War”. The paper reported that like his two previous novels, it would be “part documentary based on his journalistic experiences, and part fictional.” The reference to his journalistic experiences pointed to a Nigerian subtext, and he reflected this when remarking that “I don’t think that I would be exactly welcome in Lagos.”

It was around this time that Gay embarked on his reconnoitring mission to Fernando Po and it is likely that Forsyth was referring to him as much as to himself when speaking of his impending travels. He had delivered the manuscript to his publisher in the first months of 1973, and the plot of the resulting book was identical to that of the planned anti-Nguema mission, apart, that is. from Forsyth turning its failure into a success.

When the book was published, both Forsyth and his publishers stressed that the story was about the world of illegal arms and mercenaries and that his work in Biafra had brought him into contact with the sort of characters portrayed in the book. He had evidently begun work on the book while the operation was being planned, and it is clear that the “Republic of Zangaro” was a representation of Fernando Po and “President Jean Kimba” the incarnation of Marcias Nguema.

But what of the connection to the resurrecting of Biafra?

The beginning of the novel clearly draws upon the fall of Biafra with a group of mercenaries saying their goodbyes to a general who has just lost a war in West Africa and is flying into exile with a number of his acolytes. This mirrored the flight into exile of Ojukwu, a Lieutenant Colonel for most of the war, who was promoted to “General of the People’s Army” in May 1969. On January 9th, 1970, Ojukwu and a few others including his army chief Alexander Madiebo embarked on a plane at Uli Airport destined for the Ivory Coast.

The book ends with the character “Dr. Okoye”, an academic with an Igbo name who happens to be the representative of “The General”, assuming power in “Zangaro”. Whereas the motivation for effecting regime change in this fictional country is for the coup’s sponsors to take control of Zangaro’s valuable platinum reserves, the economic benefits of taking over Fernando Po (and the impoverished Equatorial Guinea) had no discernible long-term benefit. The country was more than a decade away from the discovery of oil deposits.

And while the plan set out by Gay clearly provided for Nguema’s assassination, no mention was explicitly made as to who would succeed him. The Sunday Times which wrote a detailed exposé pressed the issue that Ojukwu was the person whom Forsyth intended to install as the ruler of Fernando Po if the operation had succeeded.

What followed were a series of adamant denials. Charles Clark, the managing director of the book’s publisher Hutchinson’s responded by saying that a source who he could not name assured him that if there had been a plot, Ojukwu had not been involved in it and that he would have “strongly disapproved” of it. Forsyth’s London-based solicitors, Harbottle and Lewis wrote to the Sunday Times -they claimed on Ojukwu’s behalf- to state that Ojukwu strongly denied that he “inspired or was the intended beneficiary” of “the activities of a group of mercenaries” in a certain West African country.

It should ne noted however, that after Gay was given a suspended sentence for the illegal possession of arms and munitions at a November 1973 trial in which Forsyth had given evidence on his behalf as a character witness, he slipped out of the country and reportedly headed to the Ivory Coast where he joined Ojukwu who was running a transportation business.

Would Forsyth have been inspired to have undertaken such a risky endeavour on behalf of Ojukwu and the Biafran cause? There is much evidence to suggest that he carried with him an enormous amount of bitterness at how interests in Britain had, from his point of view, sabotaged the Biafran project, and it would have given him a great deal of personal satisfaction to have resurrected in some measure the dream of Biafra.

When ruminating over whether Ojukwu had been the intended beneficiary of the coup, the Sunday Times referred to the former Biafran leader as “Forsyth’s hero”. This was not an idle description. While being interviewed at his Spanish estate in 1974, Wilfred De’Ath, who was writing for the Australian newspaper The Age, asked Forsyth what he thought were the most important human qualities that a man should possess. Forsyth grabbed De’Ath’s ballpen and wrote the following on a piece of note paper:

Strength without brutality, Honesty without priggishness, Courage without recklessness, Humour without frivolity, Humanity without sentimentality, Intelligence without deviousness, Scepticism without cynicism.

Then Forsyth added:

The only man I have ever known to possess all these qualities in full measure was Emeka Ojukwu.

But if Forsyth as the mastermind of an endeavour with the objective of establishing an Igbo homeland just a hundred kilometres from the Nigerian coastline, he and Gay had not reckoned on the backlash that would have inevitably flowed from the deposing of Nguema. The threat posed to Nigerian security of a hostile government led by the leader of the Biafran secession would almost certainly have led to a political and military campaign to bring down such a government.

For many years, public concern in Nigeria over the treatment of Nigerian labourers on the island had even led to calls for the country to annexe Fernando Po. A pro-Igbo coup would also have likely led to inter-ethnic conflict between Igbos and the indigenous Bubi people and even among other Nigerian-origin peoples from Calabar and Ogoja who as minorities within the breakaway former Eastern region had been hostile to perceived Igbo domination of that region and were consequently largely resistant to Biafra. The taking of Fernando Po would also have provoked hostility in Rio Muni, the mainland enclave of Equatorial Guinea.

In 1975, thousands of Nigerian contract works were subjected to continual harassment and beatings. A New York Times article in January 1976 pointed to the root cause as anti-Igbo sentiment. It noted that Nguema belonged to the Fang tribe, “which doesn't get along with Nigeria's Ibos (sic), who traditionally make up the bulk of the contract labourers.” The Nigerian government acted to evacuate 45,000 workers between 1975 and 1976.

A mercenary takeover two years earlier, which would likely have increased anti-Igbo and anti-Nigerian feelings, would have been a recipe for disaster.

Forsyth consistently denied any knowledge of a coup being planned and that he had attended the meetings in Hamburg as part of his research into what he described as “the weapons (procurement) side” of the mercenary business. He repeated his denials to Adam Roberts, the author of The Wonga Coup, which was about the failed attempt in 2004 to overthrow President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, Nguema’s nephew and successor. He admitted to Roberts that aerial photographs of Fernado Po had been brought to his flat but that the money he had handed to the plotters was for information which he required to write the book.

But Forsyth became more equivocal as the interview progressed, saying that a “still-born attempt” at a coup had occurred and that he had spoken to several participants including Alexander Gay. He was also unsure about whether the plot of his novel inspired the coup or vice versa: “It was a chicken and egg situation.”

In the end, Forsyth admitted that Scotland Yard contacted him at his Ireland residence and told him never to try it again.

He did not. But while his involvement has for long been beyond dispute, questions still linger as to his motive. For instance, while Equatorial Guinea was not at that time an oil-rich state, prospecting for oil deposits had begun under Spanish colonial rule in the mid-1960s. It is possible that a seizure of power would have placed the coup’s orchestrators in a position to profit from future oil discoveries. This is of course speculative. It leads back to the audacious motive of resuscitating the dream of Biafra, which was clearly hinted at in The Dogs of War.

And if one word defined the life of Frederick Forsyth, it was his audacity.

© Adeyinka Makinde (2025).

Adeyinka Makinde is a writer based in London, England.

Select sources:

Roberts, Adam. The Wonga Coup: A Tale of Guns, Germs and the Steely Determination to Create Mayhem in an Oil-rich Corner of Africa. Public Affairs, 2006.

Lashmar, Paul. “Mercenaries Aimed To Topple Oil-Rich Despot,” The Independent, March 14th, 2004.

Mitchell, Paulene. “Guns For Hire,” The Hamilton Spectator, May 23rd, 1981.

Sunday Times Special Report. “Bungled Coup With a Novel Twist,” The Age, April 17th, 1978.

House, Christopher and Roe, Nicholas. “Gun Siege Man Kills Himself,” Sunday Telegraph, March 12th, 1978.

Sunday Mirror Reporters. “PC Hero,” Sunday Mirror, March 12th, 1978.

Reporter. “My Gun Ordeal, By Police Hero,” Liverpool Daily Post, March 14th, 1978.

Associated Press. “Nigeria, Citing Cruelty, Recalls 45,000 from Equatorial Guinea,” The New York Times, January 27th, 1976.

De’Ath, Wilfred. “All A Book Can Buy,” The Age, October 5th, 1974.

Akinyemi, Bolaji. “Nigeria and Fernando Poo, 1959-1966: The Politics of Irridentism”, African Affairs, July 1970, Volume 69, No. 276, pp. 236-249. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal African Society.

Frederick Forsyth ITN Interview | Allegations of Federal Massacres of Biafran Civilians | May 1968,” Adeyinka Makinde YouTube Channel, uploaded February 19th, 2022.