The origins of the group are alleged by author David Teacher to be in 1973, formed from readers of the fascist publication "Nouvel Europe Magazine" edited by neo-fascist
Emile Lecerf. The BBC Documentary Series "Operation Gladio: State Sponsored Terror", in its episode "The Foot Soldiers" of interviewed Michel Libert, who was a member of WNP from 1978 to 1981. In the BBC documentary, Libert stated that the structure of the group was a Chief of Staff supervising two management groups providing financial support and the other providing assistance from "the respective authorities", such as the police or gendermerie Several sources also listed Christiaan Bonkoffsky, a former Gendermerie, professed to have been a member of, or related to the group of murderers in the Brabant killings who was dismissed from an elite police commando unit in 1981, but saliva and fingerprint evidence taken from Bonkoffsky were not positively matched to samples obtained from the killers in the Brabant killings. === Links to NATO "strategy of tension" and Belgian stay-behind network (
Operation GLADIO / SDRA8) === Author David Teacher in his book Rogue Agents states that the Westland New Post was a recruiting front for fascist private armies which was headed since its inception by Paul Latinus, and from its inception had ties to the Belgian Sûreté de l'Etat (security state) and was an informant. Teacher also states that the WNP was a recruitment front and support for CEPIC candidates, such as lawyer and political candidate
Jean-Pierre Grafé who allegedly had reached out to the Belgian far-right, and Westland New Post's poster team had picked up the slack in his campaign. Teacher also claims that along with Major Jean-Marie Bougerol and Pierre Bonvoisin, Latinus was involved in a planned but not executed coup attempt in Belgium in 1973 . Teacher also states that Christian Smets was appointed by his superior Victor Massart to acquire Latinus as a Sûreté informant, who then introduced Smets to the WNP. In February 1982, Smets had given the WNP training on surveillance, which was then used to stalk and kill two people in the Pastorale murders (see below). This led to enormous public outcry and allegations of Smets being a fascist sympathiser who colluded witn the WNP, with Massart claiming that Smets had acted on his own without prior authorisation. Teacher claims that by exposing Smets' involvement in the scandal, Smets' investigation -- which was intended to investigate links between banker
Pierre Bonvoisin's links to funding extreme right-wing groups like the WNP -- was covered up by Smets' scandal with the group . Teacher states that the investigations into Operation Gladio revealed that Massart, Smets' superior was the principal contact for the security services and in particular, Jean-Marie Bougerol of the Public Information Office (PIO) which was originally set up by Defence Minister and AESP member
Paul Vanden Boeyants as a counter-subversion and propaganda service, which Latinus was recruited into . It was stated that Bougerol was visiting Massart despite the fact the PIO had been officially closed down, and that Bougerol then continued to view Sûreté files through his secretary Mirèze Legon which was illegal. Smets' investigation, Teacher alleges, into this illegal relationship, was "too close for comfort" . Teacher also states that Bougerol was close personal friends with fascist Lecerc and gave lectures to WNP and Front de la Jeunesse . In 1984, these scandals were beginning to become key political issues with the public due to revelations around WNP and also a 1981 report detailing links between
CEPIC and fascist publication Nouvel Europe Magazine as well as the scandal around the WNP which had gone public, which culminated in the death of Latinus in April 1984. Teacher also links the similarities of existing "stay-behind networks" with WNP's "action" units, and Unit G, which included far-right sympathisers who were in the gendarmerie. And that in other countries, such as in Italy and Greece, NATO in its use of "the strategy of tension" looked to sympathetic groups on the ground, generally right-wing groups, to carry out its activities . ==Pastorale murders==