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Bureau of State Security

The Bureau for State Security (Afrikaans: Buro vir Staatsveiligheid; also known as the Bureau of State Security (BOSS)) was the main South African state intelligence agency from 1969 to 1980. A high-budget and secretive institution, it reported directly to the Prime Minister on its broad national security mandate. Under this mandate, it was at the centre of the Apartheid state's domestic intelligence and foreign intelligence activities, including counterinsurgency efforts both inside South Africa and in neighbouring countries. Like other appendages of the Apartheid security forces, it has been implicated in human rights violations, political repression, and extra-judicial killings.[1]

Bureau for State Security
a.k.a. Bureau of State Security
Later the Department of National Security
Agency overview
Formed1 May 1969
Preceding agency
Dissolved6 February 1980
Superseding agency
JurisdictionSouth Africa
StatusDefunct
Agency executives
  • Hendrik van den Bergh, Director-General (1969 – 78)
  • Alec van Wyk (acting), Director-General (1978 – 80)

For most of its existence, BOSS was headed by General Hendrik van den Bergh, who, while special Security Adviser to Prime Minister John Vorster, was instrumental in its establishment. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission saw BOSS as an artefact of the growing politicisation of the South African intelligence and security services, which had begun to dominate the state apparatus and which in turn had begun to be dominated by Vorster's office.[1] Even as BOSS cooperated closely with other parts of the intelligence and security services – especially the South African Defence Force, the Department of Foreign Affairs, and the Security Branch of the South African Police – they were frequently locked in competition over power and resources.[1][2]

Van den Bergh resigned as Director-General in 1978 in the wake of the Muldergate scandal, and BOSS was renamed the Department of National Security. In the same year, Vorster was replaced by his Defence Minister, P.W. Botha, whose government pursued a protracted restructuring of the intelligence services, culminating in the replacement of the Department with the National Intelligence Service in 1980.

Background

Though BOSS was not formally established and legislated until May 1969, it is generally understood to have been operating from late 1968.[1] It replaced the Republican Intelligence unit of the Security Branch of the South African Police.[3] Under Minister of Justice John Vorster, Republican Intelligence and the police generally had benefitted from an expansion of their powers, through legislation such as the Sabotage Act of 1962 and the General Law Amendment Act of 1963, which allowed arbitrary arrest and detention. However, in the middle of 1968, the Cabinet approved the creation of a centralised security service. On 28 August 1968, Hendrik van den Bergh, the head of the Security Branch and Deputy Police Commissioner, was instructed to start planning the new organisation.[4] On the 1 October, he was promoted to the rank of General and appointed special Security Adviser to Vorster, who had become Prime Minister after the assassination of Hendrik Verwoerd.[5] Vorster and van der Bergh were close allies – they were both former members of the pro-Nazi Ossewabrandwag during World War II, and had been imprisoned for sabotage together.[6][7] Because of this close association, and the extensive powers he had under his advisory role, van der Bergh was seen as "untouchable," which led to tensions within the state that were only exacerbated by the establishment of "super-security" structure BOSS.[1]

 
John Vorster, the Prime Minister who established and oversaw BOSS

By March 1969, the skeleton of a new security service began to emerge in the projected expenditures for the 1969–70 financial year. R5.32 million was allocated to the secret services, a 189 percent increase over the previous year, with R4.06 million allocated to the Prime Minister's office for a new security section under van den Bergh.[5] Minister of the Interior S.L. Muller described the proposed agency as a coordinating body which would be staffed by experienced security and intelligence personnel from other departments.[5] The budget of the military intelligence division was concurrently reduced from R830 000 in the previous year to R39 000, which initiated a continuous struggle for power between military intelligence and BOSS which lasted throughout the 1970s.[5]

Formal establishment

On 16 May 1969, Government Notice No. 808 formally established the Bureau for State Security, with retrospective effect from 1 May, as a department of state under the Prime Minister.[5] Van den Bergh was appointed at its head.[1] According to the notice, BOSS's functions were:

  1. to investigate all matters affecting the security of the State, to correlate and evaluate the information collected, and, where necessary, to inform and advise the Government, interested Government departments, and other bodies in regard thereto; and
  2. to perform such other functions and responsibilities as may be determined from time to time.[5]

In the same period, a series of related legislation was introduced in Parliament: the Public Service Amendment Bill on 13 May; the Security Services Special Account Bill on 19 May; and the General Law Amendment Bill on 4 June. All three bills were passed that winter. The Public Service Amendment Act of 1969 outlined BOSS's structure – significantly, BOSS was established under the direct and exclusive control of the Prime Minister, in contrast to other public bodies, which were partly overseen by the Public Service Commission.[5] The Security Services Special Account Act of 1969 established a "Special Account" on BOSS's books, which could be expended on confidential items at the Minister's approval and which, unlike other state-funded funded accounts, would not be subject to the annual audit.[5] Finally, and most controversially, the General Law Amendment Act of 1969 included a provision which authorised the Prime Minister, his nominee, or any Cabinet Minister to veto the provision of any evidence or documents to any court or statutory body, provided the evidence or documents were "prejudicial to the interests of the State or public security."[5] The Act also made it an offence to disclose any "security matter," including any matter relating to BOSS or any person's relationship to BOSS.[5] These amendments were met with alarm among liberal and anti-Apartheid civil society groups, with opposition politician Alex Hepple likening BOSS to the Gestapo.[5]

Potgieter Commission

On 5 September 1969, Vorster formed a commission led by Justice H.J. Potgieter to establish the guidelines and mission for intelligence gathering by BOSS and military intelligence.[4][8] The Commission to Inquire into Certain Intelligence Aspects of State Security, known better as the Potgieter Commission, investigated clashes between the two organisations over who had primary responsibility for intelligence gathering in South Africa.[4] As van den Bergh was a close ally of Vorster, military intelligence saw it as a foregone conclusion that BOSS would achieve favour.[4] The report of the Commission, released on 2 February 1972, led to the enactment on 24 May of the Security Intelligence and State Security Council Act of 1972.[4][9] The Act formalised the functions and the brief of BOSS, and also established the State Security Council, which replaced the Cabinet State Security Committee and became the government's national policy centre for national security.[1][4] The Council was supposed to coordinate information gathered by BOSS and other entities, thus ensuring that none could attempt to dominate the others politically, but this system ultimately failed to reduce the rivalry among different security and intelligence agencies.[2]

Organisational structure

BOSS reportedly comprised the following departments:[4]: Chp2 

  • Subversion
  • Counter-Espionage
  • Political and Economic Espionage
  • Military Intelligence
  • Administration
  • National Evaluation, Research and Special Studies

As a department of state, it was headed by a Director-General, who for most of its existence was van den Bergh.

Activities

Other intelligence divisions, including military intelligence and the Security Branch, were required to submit intelligence to BOSS.[1][3] By the late 1970s, it was thought to employ more than 1 000 agents, many of whom worked undercover.[3]

Internal surveillance

BOSS was involved in gathering and assessing intelligence about anti-Apartheid and liberation movements, including identifying targets for raids, both in South Africa and in neighbouring countries.[1] For example, Charles Sebe, before he became security chief in the Ciskei homeland, was a BOSS agent in King William's Town, where BOSS was investigating local chapters of the Black Consciousness Movement.[1] In late 1979 and early 1980, the British Observer published allegations – substantiated by documents leaked by a former BOSS agent – that BOSS, then known as the Department of National Security, had been intercepting the mail and private telephone calls of prominent politicians and civil society leaders, including Alan Paton, André Brink, and Helen Suzman.[10][11]

Propaganda

As was revealed in the Information Scandal of 1978, BOSS acted as banker for the Department of Information in respect of a secret slush fund channelled from the Department of Defence and used to fund a series of propaganda projects, including the establishment of the Citizen, a pro-government newspaper.[12] Some of BOSS's own budget was occasionally used for the same purpose. It is unclear exactly what role BOSS played in the propaganda campaign at the heart of the scandal, but the Department of Information relied on BOSS intelligence.[13] Van den Bergh was certainly closely involved in the planning and implementation of the campaign, and other BOSS officials may also have been.[14]

Z-Squad and alleged extra-judicial killings

 
Onkgopotse Tiro was murdered in 1974, probably by BOSS

At the Erasmus Commission of inquiry following the Muldergate scandal, van den Bergh hinted that murder was within the scope of BOSS's duties: "I have enough men to commit murder if I tell them to kill. I don't care who the prey is. These are the type of men I have."[15][1][16] Former BOSS agents later claimed that BOSS was involved in extra-judicial killings through a covert operational unit formed in the early 1970s and known as the "Z-Squad." Others confirmed that the Z-Squad existed but denied that it was involved in political killings.[1] The Z-Squad was linked to the 1977 assassination of NP politician Robert Smit and his wife; the 1978 assassination of Rick Turner; and the February 1974 cross-border assassinations by letter bombs of anti-Apartheid activists John Dube ('Boy Mvemve') of Umkhonto weSizwe and Onkgopotse Tiro of SASO.[1] It has also been alleged that the Z-Squad specialised in interrogating South Africans who had been captured fighting for nationalist movements in Rhodesia and Mozambique, some of whom were killed after interrogation.[1] The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) concluded in its final report that BOSS was "possibly" involved in extra-judicial killings, and probably responsible for the murders of Dube and Tiro.[1]

Operations in southern African countries

The TRC heard evidence that BOSS and the South African Defence Force (SADF) jointly led Operation Plathond, under which Zambians were trained for destabilisation operations against the pro-ANC Kaunda government.[1] The TRC was not able to corroborate the claims and details of the Operation remain opaque. However, close links among BOSS and other intelligence services – especially PIDE of colonial Mozambique and the Rhodesian Central Intelligence Organisation and security police – are well-documented and dated back at least to 1969. The agencies coordinated their counterinsurgency efforts in southern Africa and discussed cooperating on covert operations against Kaunda's government; and BOSS channelled "material support" directly from the South African government to intelligence services in Angola and Mozambique.[1][17] BOSS may also have had a relationship with the American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) – van den Bergh received CIA training before BOSS was established.[1]

Demise

In the wake of the Information Scandal, which implicated both BOSS and Vorster, van den Bergh resigned in June 1978 and was replaced by Alec van Wyk as acting Director-General.[1][18] On 1 September 1978, BOSS was renamed the Department of National Security (DONS).[18]

On 20 September, Vorster resigned and was replaced by his Defence Minister, P.W. Botha. Botha's ascension increased the influence of SADF and especially of military intelligence.[4] According to the TRC, the dominance of BOSS and the Security Branch had already began to wane in the late 1970s,[1] amid what was later described as "years of illegality, financial abuse and political meddling" at BOSS/DONS.[19] Botha brought BOSS under tighter executive control.[20] He also appointed Kobie Coetsee, Deputy Defence and Intelligence Minister, to lead a commission of inquiry into intelligence gathering in South Africa and in particular into the question of who would be the lead agency.[4] At the same time, the Erasmus Commission was investigating the Information Scandal.[4] Believing that the outcome of neither inquiry would be to the advantage of BOSS/DONS, officials began to shred any documentation that could be used against them.[4]

In November 1979, Botha appointed Niel Barnard to BOSS/DONS, with a view to having Barnard lead its transformation.[18] Barnard was promoted to Director-General in February 1980,[18][1] and, at the same time, Botha announced that BOSS/DONS would become the National Intelligence Service.[21] In this new iteration, BOSS/DONS was restructured to focus on research and analysis, with its covert operational functions transferred to the Security Branch.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report (PDF). Vol. 2. Cape Town: The Commission. 1998.
  2. ^ a b Seegers, Annette (1991). "South Africa's National Security Management System, 1972-90". The Journal of Modern African Studies. 29 (2): 253–273. doi:10.1017/S0022278X00002743. hdl:11427/25748. ISSN 0022-278X. JSTOR 161023. S2CID 154278709.
  3. ^ a b c Swart, Heidi (2019-03-14). "Intimidation, interception and break-ins: SA security forces and the threat of accountability". Daily Maverick. from the original on 2019-03-15. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l O'Brien, Kevin A. (2011). The South African Intelligence Services: From Apartheid to Democracy, 1948-2005. Abingdon, Oxford: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-203-84061-0.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Hepple, Alex (October 1969). "South Africa's Bureau for State Security". Royal Institute of International Affairs. 25 (10): 436–439. JSTOR 40394202.
  6. ^ Clark, Nancy L.; William H. Worger (2016). South Africa: the rise and fall of apartheid (Third ed.). Abingdon, Oxon. ISBN 978-1-138-12444-8. OCLC 883649263.
  7. ^ Shear, Keith (2012). "Tested loyalties: police and politics in South Africa, 1939—63". The Journal of African History. 53 (2): 173–193. doi:10.1017/S0021853712000370. ISSN 0021-8537. JSTOR 23353654. S2CID 153477610.
  8. ^ "Submissions to the Commission of Inquiry into Matters Relating to the Security of the State from the National Union of South African Students". South African History Online. 2016. from the original on 2021-11-23. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  9. ^ "An abridged version of the security report by Justice H.J. Potgieter's Commission of Inquiry on State Security is submitted to". South African History Online (SAHO). Retrieved 29 December 2014.
  10. ^ Tyler, Humphrey (1980-01-08). "S. Africa's police: men of many letters?". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  11. ^ Alhadeff, Vic (2018). "Journalism during South Africa's apartheid regime". Cosmopolitan Civil Societies. 10 (2): 7–11. doi:10.5130/ccs.v10i2.5924. ISSN 1837-5391. S2CID 158655245. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  12. ^ Haasbroek, Joshua (2016). "A historical perspective of the information scandal" – via University of the Free State. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ Sanders, James (2012-10-12). South Africa and the International Media, 1972-1979: A Struggle for Representation. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-32727-8.
  14. ^ Burns, John F. (1979-04-01). "Acid general is key in Pretoria scandal". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-11-28.
  15. ^ Braid, Mary (21 August 1997). "Obituary: Hendrik van den Bergh". The Independent. Retrieved 20 February 2019.
  16. ^ Pauw, Jacques (2017-12-14). Into the Heart of the Whore: The Story of Apartheid's Death Squads. Jonathan Ball Publishers. ISBN 978-1-86842-895-3.
  17. ^ de Meneses, Filipe Ribeiro; McNamara, Robert (2014). "Parallel Diplomacy, Parallel War: The PIDE/DGS's Dealings with Rhodesia and South Africa, 1961–74". Journal of Contemporary History. 49 (2): 366–389. doi:10.1177/0022009413515536. ISSN 0022-0094. S2CID 159755969.
  18. ^ a b c d Sanders, James (2006). Apartheid's Friends: The Rise and Fall of South Africa's Secret Service. John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-6675-2.
  19. ^ Cilliers, Jakkie (2021-07-21). "South Africa's security sector is in crisis – reform must start now". ISS Africa. from the original on 2021-07-21. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  20. ^ "1978". The O'Malley Archives. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  21. ^ O'Malley, Padraig. "1980". The O'Malley Archives. from the original on 2010-03-05. Retrieved 21 November 2014.

Further reading

  • Sanders, James (2006). Apartheid's Friends: The Rise and Fall of South Africa's Secret Service. John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-6675-2. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  • Spaarwater, Maritz (2012). A Spook's Progress: From Making War to Making Peace. Penguin Random House South Africa. ISBN 978-1-77022-438-4.
  • Swanepoel, Petrus Cornelius (2007). Really Inside BOSS: A Tale of South Africa's Late Intelligence Service (and Something about the CIA). Piet Swanepoel. ISBN 978-0-620-38272-4.
  • Winter, Gordon (1981). Inside BOSS: South Africa's Secret Police. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-1391-0. Retrieved 15 October 2022.

External links

  • Hendrik van den Bergh denies allegations against BOSS (Associated Press, 2 July 1979)

bureau, state, security, bureau, state, security, afrikaans, buro, staatsveiligheid, also, known, boss, main, south, african, state, intelligence, agency, from, 1969, 1980, high, budget, secretive, institution, reported, directly, prime, minister, broad, natio. The Bureau for State Security Afrikaans Buro vir Staatsveiligheid also known as the Bureau of State Security BOSS was the main South African state intelligence agency from 1969 to 1980 A high budget and secretive institution it reported directly to the Prime Minister on its broad national security mandate Under this mandate it was at the centre of the Apartheid state s domestic intelligence and foreign intelligence activities including counterinsurgency efforts both inside South Africa and in neighbouring countries Like other appendages of the Apartheid security forces it has been implicated in human rights violations political repression and extra judicial killings 1 Bureau for State Securitya k a Bureau of State SecurityLater the Department of National SecurityAgency overviewFormed1 May 1969Preceding agencyRepublican IntelligenceDissolved6 February 1980Superseding agencyNational Intelligence ServiceJurisdictionSouth AfricaStatusDefunctAgency executivesHendrik van den Bergh Director General 1969 78 Alec van Wyk acting Director General 1978 80 For most of its existence BOSS was headed by General Hendrik van den Bergh who while special Security Adviser to Prime Minister John Vorster was instrumental in its establishment The Truth and Reconciliation Commission saw BOSS as an artefact of the growing politicisation of the South African intelligence and security services which had begun to dominate the state apparatus and which in turn had begun to be dominated by Vorster s office 1 Even as BOSS cooperated closely with other parts of the intelligence and security services especially the South African Defence Force the Department of Foreign Affairs and the Security Branch of the South African Police they were frequently locked in competition over power and resources 1 2 Van den Bergh resigned as Director General in 1978 in the wake of the Muldergate scandal and BOSS was renamed the Department of National Security In the same year Vorster was replaced by his Defence Minister P W Botha whose government pursued a protracted restructuring of the intelligence services culminating in the replacement of the Department with the National Intelligence Service in 1980 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Formal establishment 1 2 Potgieter Commission 2 Organisational structure 3 Activities 3 1 Internal surveillance 3 2 Propaganda 3 3 Z Squad and alleged extra judicial killings 3 4 Operations in southern African countries 4 Demise 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackground EditThough BOSS was not formally established and legislated until May 1969 it is generally understood to have been operating from late 1968 1 It replaced the Republican Intelligence unit of the Security Branch of the South African Police 3 Under Minister of Justice John Vorster Republican Intelligence and the police generally had benefitted from an expansion of their powers through legislation such as the Sabotage Act of 1962 and the General Law Amendment Act of 1963 which allowed arbitrary arrest and detention However in the middle of 1968 the Cabinet approved the creation of a centralised security service On 28 August 1968 Hendrik van den Bergh the head of the Security Branch and Deputy Police Commissioner was instructed to start planning the new organisation 4 On the 1 October he was promoted to the rank of General and appointed special Security Adviser to Vorster who had become Prime Minister after the assassination of Hendrik Verwoerd 5 Vorster and van der Bergh were close allies they were both former members of the pro Nazi Ossewabrandwag during World War II and had been imprisoned for sabotage together 6 7 Because of this close association and the extensive powers he had under his advisory role van der Bergh was seen as untouchable which led to tensions within the state that were only exacerbated by the establishment of super security structure BOSS 1 John Vorster the Prime Minister who established and oversaw BOSS By March 1969 the skeleton of a new security service began to emerge in the projected expenditures for the 1969 70 financial year R5 32 million was allocated to the secret services a 189 percent increase over the previous year with R4 06 million allocated to the Prime Minister s office for a new security section under van den Bergh 5 Minister of the Interior S L Muller described the proposed agency as a coordinating body which would be staffed by experienced security and intelligence personnel from other departments 5 The budget of the military intelligence division was concurrently reduced from R830 000 in the previous year to R39 000 which initiated a continuous struggle for power between military intelligence and BOSS which lasted throughout the 1970s 5 Formal establishment EditOn 16 May 1969 Government Notice No 808 formally established the Bureau for State Security with retrospective effect from 1 May as a department of state under the Prime Minister 5 Van den Bergh was appointed at its head 1 According to the notice BOSS s functions were to investigate all matters affecting the security of the State to correlate and evaluate the information collected and where necessary to inform and advise the Government interested Government departments and other bodies in regard thereto and to perform such other functions and responsibilities as may be determined from time to time 5 In the same period a series of related legislation was introduced in Parliament the Public Service Amendment Bill on 13 May the Security Services Special Account Bill on 19 May and the General Law Amendment Bill on 4 June All three bills were passed that winter The Public Service Amendment Act of 1969 outlined BOSS s structure significantly BOSS was established under the direct and exclusive control of the Prime Minister in contrast to other public bodies which were partly overseen by the Public Service Commission 5 The Security Services Special Account Act of 1969 established a Special Account on BOSS s books which could be expended on confidential items at the Minister s approval and which unlike other state funded funded accounts would not be subject to the annual audit 5 Finally and most controversially the General Law Amendment Act of 1969 included a provision which authorised the Prime Minister his nominee or any Cabinet Minister to veto the provision of any evidence or documents to any court or statutory body provided the evidence or documents were prejudicial to the interests of the State or public security 5 The Act also made it an offence to disclose any security matter including any matter relating to BOSS or any person s relationship to BOSS 5 These amendments were met with alarm among liberal and anti Apartheid civil society groups with opposition politician Alex Hepple likening BOSS to the Gestapo 5 Potgieter Commission Edit On 5 September 1969 Vorster formed a commission led by Justice H J Potgieter to establish the guidelines and mission for intelligence gathering by BOSS and military intelligence 4 8 The Commission to Inquire into Certain Intelligence Aspects of State Security known better as the Potgieter Commission investigated clashes between the two organisations over who had primary responsibility for intelligence gathering in South Africa 4 As van den Bergh was a close ally of Vorster military intelligence saw it as a foregone conclusion that BOSS would achieve favour 4 The report of the Commission released on 2 February 1972 led to the enactment on 24 May of the Security Intelligence and State Security Council Act of 1972 4 9 The Act formalised the functions and the brief of BOSS and also established the State Security Council which replaced the Cabinet State Security Committee and became the government s national policy centre for national security 1 4 The Council was supposed to coordinate information gathered by BOSS and other entities thus ensuring that none could attempt to dominate the others politically but this system ultimately failed to reduce the rivalry among different security and intelligence agencies 2 Organisational structure EditBOSS reportedly comprised the following departments 4 Chp2 Subversion Counter Espionage Political and Economic Espionage Military Intelligence Administration National Evaluation Research and Special StudiesAs a department of state it was headed by a Director General who for most of its existence was van den Bergh Activities EditOther intelligence divisions including military intelligence and the Security Branch were required to submit intelligence to BOSS 1 3 By the late 1970s it was thought to employ more than 1 000 agents many of whom worked undercover 3 Internal surveillance Edit BOSS was involved in gathering and assessing intelligence about anti Apartheid and liberation movements including identifying targets for raids both in South Africa and in neighbouring countries 1 For example Charles Sebe before he became security chief in the Ciskei homeland was a BOSS agent in King William s Town where BOSS was investigating local chapters of the Black Consciousness Movement 1 In late 1979 and early 1980 the British Observer published allegations substantiated by documents leaked by a former BOSS agent that BOSS then known as the Department of National Security had been intercepting the mail and private telephone calls of prominent politicians and civil society leaders including Alan Paton Andre Brink and Helen Suzman 10 11 Propaganda Edit Main article Muldergate As was revealed in the Information Scandal of 1978 BOSS acted as banker for the Department of Information in respect of a secret slush fund channelled from the Department of Defence and used to fund a series of propaganda projects including the establishment of the Citizen a pro government newspaper 12 Some of BOSS s own budget was occasionally used for the same purpose It is unclear exactly what role BOSS played in the propaganda campaign at the heart of the scandal but the Department of Information relied on BOSS intelligence 13 Van den Bergh was certainly closely involved in the planning and implementation of the campaign and other BOSS officials may also have been 14 Z Squad and alleged extra judicial killings Edit Onkgopotse Tiro was murdered in 1974 probably by BOSS At the Erasmus Commission of inquiry following the Muldergate scandal van den Bergh hinted that murder was within the scope of BOSS s duties I have enough men to commit murder if I tell them to kill I don t care who the prey is These are the type of men I have 15 1 16 Former BOSS agents later claimed that BOSS was involved in extra judicial killings through a covert operational unit formed in the early 1970s and known as the Z Squad Others confirmed that the Z Squad existed but denied that it was involved in political killings 1 The Z Squad was linked to the 1977 assassination of NP politician Robert Smit and his wife the 1978 assassination of Rick Turner and the February 1974 cross border assassinations by letter bombs of anti Apartheid activists John Dube Boy Mvemve of Umkhonto weSizwe and Onkgopotse Tiro of SASO 1 It has also been alleged that the Z Squad specialised in interrogating South Africans who had been captured fighting for nationalist movements in Rhodesia and Mozambique some of whom were killed after interrogation 1 The Truth and Reconciliation Commission TRC concluded in its final report that BOSS was possibly involved in extra judicial killings and probably responsible for the murders of Dube and Tiro 1 Operations in southern African countries Edit The TRC heard evidence that BOSS and the South African Defence Force SADF jointly led Operation Plathond under which Zambians were trained for destabilisation operations against the pro ANC Kaunda government 1 The TRC was not able to corroborate the claims and details of the Operation remain opaque However close links among BOSS and other intelligence services especially PIDE of colonial Mozambique and the Rhodesian Central Intelligence Organisation and security police are well documented and dated back at least to 1969 The agencies coordinated their counterinsurgency efforts in southern Africa and discussed cooperating on covert operations against Kaunda s government and BOSS channelled material support directly from the South African government to intelligence services in Angola and Mozambique 1 17 BOSS may also have had a relationship with the American Central Intelligence Agency CIA van den Bergh received CIA training before BOSS was established 1 Demise EditIn the wake of the Information Scandal which implicated both BOSS and Vorster van den Bergh resigned in June 1978 and was replaced by Alec van Wyk as acting Director General 1 18 On 1 September 1978 BOSS was renamed the Department of National Security DONS 18 On 20 September Vorster resigned and was replaced by his Defence Minister P W Botha Botha s ascension increased the influence of SADF and especially of military intelligence 4 According to the TRC the dominance of BOSS and the Security Branch had already began to wane in the late 1970s 1 amid what was later described as years of illegality financial abuse and political meddling at BOSS DONS 19 Botha brought BOSS under tighter executive control 20 He also appointed Kobie Coetsee Deputy Defence and Intelligence Minister to lead a commission of inquiry into intelligence gathering in South Africa and in particular into the question of who would be the lead agency 4 At the same time the Erasmus Commission was investigating the Information Scandal 4 Believing that the outcome of neither inquiry would be to the advantage of BOSS DONS officials began to shred any documentation that could be used against them 4 In November 1979 Botha appointed Niel Barnard to BOSS DONS with a view to having Barnard lead its transformation 18 Barnard was promoted to Director General in February 1980 18 1 and at the same time Botha announced that BOSS DONS would become the National Intelligence Service 21 In this new iteration BOSS DONS was restructured to focus on research and analysis with its covert operational functions transferred to the Security Branch 4 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report PDF Vol 2 Cape Town The Commission 1998 a b Seegers Annette 1991 South Africa s National Security Management System 1972 90 The Journal of Modern African Studies 29 2 253 273 doi 10 1017 S0022278X00002743 hdl 11427 25748 ISSN 0022 278X JSTOR 161023 S2CID 154278709 a b c Swart Heidi 2019 03 14 Intimidation interception and break ins SA security forces and the threat of accountability Daily Maverick Archived from the original on 2019 03 15 Retrieved 2021 11 23 a b c d e f g h i j k l O Brien Kevin A 2011 The South African Intelligence Services From Apartheid to Democracy 1948 2005 Abingdon Oxford Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 84061 0 a b c d e f g h i j k Hepple Alex October 1969 South Africa s Bureau for State Security Royal Institute of International Affairs 25 10 436 439 JSTOR 40394202 Clark Nancy L William H Worger 2016 South Africa the rise and fall of apartheid Third ed Abingdon Oxon ISBN 978 1 138 12444 8 OCLC 883649263 Shear Keith 2012 Tested loyalties police and politics in South Africa 1939 63 The Journal of African History 53 2 173 193 doi 10 1017 S0021853712000370 ISSN 0021 8537 JSTOR 23353654 S2CID 153477610 Submissions to the Commission of Inquiry into Matters Relating to the Security of the State from the National Union of South African Students South African History Online 2016 Archived from the original on 2021 11 23 Retrieved 2021 11 23 An abridged version of the security report by Justice H J Potgieter s Commission of Inquiry on State Security is submitted to South African History Online SAHO Retrieved 29 December 2014 Tyler Humphrey 1980 01 08 S Africa s police men of many letters Christian Science Monitor ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 15 October 2022 Alhadeff Vic 2018 Journalism during South Africa s apartheid regime Cosmopolitan Civil Societies 10 2 7 11 doi 10 5130 ccs v10i2 5924 ISSN 1837 5391 S2CID 158655245 Retrieved 15 October 2022 Haasbroek Joshua 2016 A historical perspective of the information scandal via University of the Free State a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sanders James 2012 10 12 South Africa and the International Media 1972 1979 A Struggle for Representation Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 32727 8 Burns John F 1979 04 01 Acid general is key in Pretoria scandal The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 11 28 Braid Mary 21 August 1997 Obituary Hendrik van den Bergh The Independent Retrieved 20 February 2019 Pauw Jacques 2017 12 14 Into the Heart of the Whore The Story of Apartheid s Death Squads Jonathan Ball Publishers ISBN 978 1 86842 895 3 de Meneses Filipe Ribeiro McNamara Robert 2014 Parallel Diplomacy Parallel War The PIDE DGS s Dealings with Rhodesia and South Africa 1961 74 Journal of Contemporary History 49 2 366 389 doi 10 1177 0022009413515536 ISSN 0022 0094 S2CID 159755969 a b c d Sanders James 2006 Apartheid s Friends The Rise and Fall of South Africa s Secret Service John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 6675 2 Cilliers Jakkie 2021 07 21 South Africa s security sector is in crisis reform must start now ISS Africa Archived from the original on 2021 07 21 Retrieved 2021 11 23 1978 The O Malley Archives Retrieved 21 November 2014 O Malley Padraig 1980 The O Malley Archives Archived from the original on 2010 03 05 Retrieved 21 November 2014 Further reading EditSanders James 2006 Apartheid s Friends The Rise and Fall of South Africa s Secret Service John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 6675 2 Retrieved 15 October 2022 Spaarwater Maritz 2012 A Spook s Progress From Making War to Making Peace Penguin Random House South Africa ISBN 978 1 77022 438 4 Swanepoel Petrus Cornelius 2007 Really Inside BOSS A Tale of South Africa s Late Intelligence Service and Something about the CIA Piet Swanepoel ISBN 978 0 620 38272 4 Winter Gordon 1981 Inside BOSS South Africa s Secret Police Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 1391 0 Retrieved 15 October 2022 External links EditHendrik van den Bergh denies allegations against BOSS Associated Press 2 July 1979 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bureau of State Security amp oldid 1136126602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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