Sir David Stirling
Sir David Stirling (15 November 1915 - 4 November 1990) was the founder of the Special Air Service (UK). wiki
"Stirling was the founder of the Capricorn Africa Society - a society for promoting an Africa free from racial discrimination. Founded in 1949, while Africa was still under colonial rule, it had its high point at the 1956 Salima Conference. However, because of his emphasis on a qualified and highly elitist voting franchise, Africans opposed it. Conversely Caucasian settlers believed it to be too liberal. Consequently the society was ineffective, although surprisingly the South African Communist Party used Stirling's multi-racial elitist model for its 1955 "Congress Alliance" when taking over the African National Congress of South Africa. Stirling resigned as Chairman of the Society in 1959.
"Stirling was concerned about the political power of trade unions in Britain, so in 1975 he set up the organisation GB75, which he described as 'an organisation of apprehensive patriots' which would help the country in the event of strikes." [1]
Resources and articles
Related Sourcewatch articles
- KAS International
- History of private military companies
- David Stirling: the authorised biography of the creator of the SAS by Alan Hoe (1992) Red Lobster review
- John Hanks
References
- ↑ David Stirling, sasspecialairservice, accessed June 23, 2009.