In 1972, two Scots, Donald
Curie and Gerard McGuigan, decided to force the Conservative party
to honour its "promise" made in the "Declaration of
Perth", and introduce into the British Parliament the promised
Green Paper, which would only discuss Home Rule for Scotland. Succeeding
far beyond their plans and expectations, their bombs forced the
Government to produce a firm proposal, [a White Paper], to restore
Scotland's Parliament; the oldest in Europe. A referendum was held
and a new Parliament House was built in that magnificent European
capital city of Edinburgh. The "army" scared the Government,
["I find this man very disturbing ", said Margaret Thatcher in
the House of Commons, after watching McGuigan on T. V. ], into
thinking it had another Northern Ireland on its hands and this time on
its doorstep. The S. A. S was told to catch them; they failed and
"the biggest manhunt since the second world war" had begun.
Scotland's chief civil servant was jailed for seven years; the U. S. A.
afraid that the Soviet Union was going to back an uprising by four
prominent Scots soldiers, laid plans to buy up all the land on both
sides of the Caledonian Canal and turn it into a Tartan Panama canal as
a safe passage for oil from the North Sea to the Atlantic. A C. I.
A. agent sympathetic to their cause kept them informed. Another C.
I. A. agent, a prominent member of the Scottish National Party,
broke into the party's headquarters and photographed the membership
files. Meanwhile the British Prime Minister was under investigation by
the British secret service, suspected of being a Soviet agent. He
resigned without warning or reason. A prominent lawyer, a
former member of the British secret service, who set up a shadow Tartan
Army, was murdered. The book tells the true story of Feachd nam Breacan,
[The Tartan Army], first established in 1715 and how the Scottish
football supporters got their name. A tale which starts with the theft
of the 600 year old Wallace Sword, and ends in betrayal by a member of
the S. N. P. ; a Gilbert and Sullivan trial at the High Court complete
with wigs, laughs, lies and planted evidence. With out the Tartan Army
there would have been no fair allocation of broadcasting time no White
Paper, no referendum for Scotland or Wales and no new Parliament
building. The giant fiddler of the A. P. G. , the Special Branch of the
Irish Republic, the Knights Templar, Robertson of Stone of Destiny
infamy and others, [who blasted Edinburgh Castle in 1971?], have their
place in this exciting and sometimes hilarious story of bravery
cowardice and treachery. When the election "promise" of Ted
Heath and his Scotch manques turned out to be only an election promise,
two Scots turned to the bomb and within three days of their first bomb,
achieved what millions of words, meetings and argument had failed to
achieve. If you have read Douglas Hurd's "Scotch On The Rocks",
or " Britain's Secret War" you will want to read this, because
this is for real. Fear was the key. The lies failed. The
bomb triumphed. |