Rotorua Daily Post

French secret service boss during Rainbow Warrior attack dies

-

I asked the president if he gave me permission to put into action the neutralisa­tion place that I had studied on the request of Monsieur [Charles] Hernu.

Admiral Pierre Lacoste

The man who headed the French secret service when the Rainbow Warrior was bombed in Auckland has died almost 35 years after the debacle.

Admiral Pierre Lacoste died in a retirement home in Paris on Monday (local time), French media is reporting.

He would have celebrated his 96th birthday next week.

Lacoste, a well-known figure in the French intelligen­ce service, was the leader of the Direction Generale de la Securite Exterieure (DGSE) from 1982 and during the Rainbow Warrior debacle in July, 1985.

He was later dismissed by the then French president, Francois Mitterrand, after the infamous bombing of the Greenpeace ship on July 10 at Marsden Wharf.

In 2005 — on the 20th anniversar­y of the bombing that killed crew member and photograph­er, 35-yearold Fernando Pereira — French newspaper Le Monde published an extract of a written account given by Lacoste in 1986. “I asked the president if he gave me permission to put into action the neutralisa­tion place that I had studied on the request of Monsieur [Charles] Hernu,” he wrote.

Hernu was the French Defence Minister at the time.

“He gave me his agreement while stressing the importance he placed on the nuclear tests. I didn’t go into greater detail on the plan as the authorisat­ion was explicit enough.”

Lacoste also wrote that he would not have launched such an operation without the personal authorisat­ion of the “President of the Republic.”

Lacoste’s son, Marc, told French media that his father died peacefully in his bed.

 ?? Photo / File ?? The Rainbow Warrior after it was bombed in 1985.
Photo / File The Rainbow Warrior after it was bombed in 1985.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand