The History of the Black Liberation Army

The history of our national liberation struggle is one of the most important factors upon which the political party(s), the oppressed masses, and the liberation armed forces may understand the nature of their oppression and the task before them towards independence and freedom.

In this article, I would like to present to the masses the general history of the evolvement of the Black Liberation Army. This will be a brief historical overview not providing specific historical data in order to protect people who are either functioning in the BLA, or in other areas no longer associated with the BLA. The Black Liberation Army is a politico military organization, whose primary objective is to fight for the independence and self- determination of Afrikan people in the United States. The political determination of the BLA evolved out of the now defunct Black Panther Party.

It was in October, 1966, with the advent of the Black Panther Party for Self Defense, that the question of armed struggle band resistance to racist oppression emerge as a plausible strategical maneuver in the developing liberation movement. It was in late 1968, early 1969, that the forming of a Black underground first began. From Los Angeles, California, to Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, armed units were formed in rural areas, trained and caches were established. In Oakland, San Francisco, Detroit, Chicago, Philadelphia, Ohio, and New York, Black Panther Party offices were established to formulate a political relationship with the oppressed Black masses in these and other communities across the country.

From 1969 to 1972, the BPP came under vicious attack by the State and Federal government. The government employed COINTELPRO (FBI, CIA and local police departments) as the means to destroy the above-ground political apparatus that fielded the Black underground. But it wasn’t until 1970 that the BPP began its purge of many of its most trusted and militant members, many of which eventually joined the Black underground.

By 1971, contradictions perpetuated by COINTELPRO forces in the leadership of the BPP caused the split between Newton and Cleaver, which eventually split the entire Black Panther Party into two major factions. It was this BPP split and factionalism that determined the fielding of the Black underground would begin to serve its primary purpose (along with conditions presented by the State armed offensive to liquidate the Party). his is not to say that armed action against the State did not occur by the Black underground prior to the split, on the contrary, by 1971, the Black underground was becoming rich in experience in the tactics of armed expropriations, sabotage, and ambush assaults. It needs to be said that prior to the split, the Black underground was the official armed wing of the aboveground political apparatus, and thereby had to maintain restraint in its military activity. This was very well for the Black underground but although in many areas experienced in tactical military guerilla warfare, it was still infantile politically, and although becoming organizationally wielded as a fighting apparatus, it did not establish an infra-structure completely autonomous from the aboveground BPP cadres and Party chapters. This in turn became one of the major detriments of the Black underground after the split of the Black Panther Party.

Based upon the split and factionalism in the BPP, and heightened repression by the State, the Black underground was ordered to begin establishing the capacity to take the “defensive- offensive” in developing urban guerilla warfare. Hence, in 1971, the name BLACK LIBERATION ARMY (of Afro American Liberation Army) surfaced as the nucleus of Black guerilla fighters across the United States. This is not to say that the name Black Liberation Army was first used in 1971, for in late 1968, during a student strike and demonstration in Mexico City, many students and demonstrators were killed by Mexican police. One of those students was reported to have had a piece of paper in his pocket upon which was written the name Black Liberation Army. Whether or not there was a connection to the fielding of the Black underground with the uprising in Mexico in 1968 is unknown.

Since the split in the BPP and the call of the “defensive- offensive” commenced, the Black underground which in May of 1971 bore the name Black Liberation Army, had committed many armed attacks against the State as part of the BPP (and after the split) many of which are unrecorded. Here I would like to present the Justice Department-LEAA Task Force report on BLA activity (it should be noted these reports were recorded by the State according to when they captured, killed, or in some ways received information concerning BLA activity, and therefore one sided and by no means indicated all BLA activity in the last ten years).
Listing of Justice Department Report on
BLA Activity from January, 1970 – January, 1976

1970:
October 22. San Francisco, Calif. – An antipersonnel time bomb explodes outside a
church, showering steel shrapnel on mourners of a patrolman slain in a bank holdup; no
one is injured. The BLA is suspected.

1971:
January 13. Hunters Point, Calif. – A police officer is shot by BLA member.

January 19. San Francisco, Calif. – Two police officers are wounded by BLA members.

March 30. San Francisco, Calif. – There is a BLA attempt to bomb a police station.

April 19. New York City – Two black men lure patrolman Curry and Binetti by driving
the wrong way and ignoring a traffic light; when apprehended the driver drops down and
the passenger fires a machine gun at the doors and windows of the patrol car; the Black
Liberation Army is suspected.

May 19. Harlem, New York City – Patrolman Piagentini and Waverly Jones are killed in
an ambush by alleged members of the BLA.

June 5. New York City – Four men associated with the Black Liberation Army attempted
to hold-up a night club called the Triple O. One cab driver is killed.

June 18. New York City – BLA members rob a bank for funds.

August – Twenty BLA members leave New York City and rent a farmhouse in
Fayetteville, GA., where they conduct a guerilla warfare school for one month, during
which they hold-up a bank and kill an Atlanta policeman.

August 23. Queens, New York – The Bankers Trust Company is robbed; Black
Liberation Army members are identified as participants.

August 28. San Francisco, Calif. – Two BLA members attempt to machine gun a San
Francisco police department patrol car, after an exchange of gun fire, they are
apprehended. The service revolver of a slain New York City patrolman, Waverly Jones,
is found in their possession.

August 29. San Francisco, Calif. – A police sergeant is killed at his desk when two black
men fire repeated blasts into the Ingelside police station; the BLA is suspected.

October 7. Atlanta, GA – The Peters Street branch of Fulton National Bank is robbed,
reportedly by the Black Liberation Army.

November 3. Atlanta, GA – Officer James Richard Greene is shot in a paddy wagon; the
scene of the shooting is 3 miles from a residence used by the Black Liberation Army, this
organization believed responsible for the shooting.

December 12. Atlanta, GA – Three reported Black Liberation Army members and two
other prisoners escape from the DeKalb County jail.

December 21. Atlanta, GA – New York City – Two police notice suspicious car near
Bankers Trust Company in Queens; when they approach the car, it speeds away, after
individuals in the car roll a grenade towards the police car; the grenade explodes, causing
considerable damage towards the police car, and injuring the policemen; two suspects are
identified as Black Liberation Army members.

December 31. Brooklyn, NY – BLA members engage in a shoot- out with a rival group in
the offices of Youth in Action.

December 31. Odessa, Fla. – BLA member is killed in a shoot out with FBI.

1972:

January 12. Houston, Texas – Members of the BLA are charged June 6 for shooting and wounding of
the off duty Housing Police detectives.

January 19. Philadelphia, PA. – Two BLA members are arrested with two suitcases containing guns.

January 27. New York City – In the morning two patrolmen notice a car going through two red lights;
when they approach to ask for a driver’s license, the driver starts shooting; one patrolman is seriously
wounded … In the evening, two policemen, Gregory Foster and Rocco Laurie, shot in the back by at
least three persons; four suspects in the case are members of the Black Liberation Army; one suspect
is later killed in a street battle with St. Louis police; the recovered pistol matches Laurie’s.

February 16. St. Louis, Mo. – A Black Liberation Army member, tied to shooting of Foster and Laurie,
is killed in a gun battle with police; two others are arrested.

May 10. Columbia, S.C. – Four BLA members arrested with guns.

August 8. Newark, NJ – BLA member who escaped after shooting sergeant and patrolmen on April
19, 1971, is captured.

September 9. Brooklyn, NY – Three BLA members, including one who escaped from DeKalb County,
Ga. jail are arrested.

October 7. Los Angeles, Calif. – Police car bombing claimed by Afro American Liberation Army.

December 28. Brooklyn, NY – An owner of a bar is kidnapped by the BLA and held for $20,000
ransom.

1973:

January 2. Brooklyn, NY – During the robbery of a social club, BLA members shoot and kill a victim.

January 10. Brooklyn, NY – After being confronted on a subway station by a patrolman, a BLA
member fires a shot and escapes into the tunnel.

January 12. Brooklyn, NY – Two Housing detectives are shot in front of a bar after stopping two BLA
members.

January 23. Brooklyn, NY – Two wanted BLA members are shot and killed by members of New York
City police department after they are trapped in a bar. Two detectives are wounded.

January 25. Brooklyn, NY – Two patrolmen brothers assigned to same car are machine gunned by the
BLA.

January 28. Queens, NY – Two patrolmen on patrol are machine gunned by BLA members, who
escape.

February 9. Bronx, NY – Members of the Black Liberation Army robbed a bank.

February 23. Brooklyn, NY – Two BLA members are arrested with a carload of explosives.

March 2. Brooklyn, NY – A group of BLA members, stopped by officers looking for a robbery
suspect, engage the officers in a gun battle.

March 6. Bronx, NY – Three BLA members are recognized by two detectives, and engage them in a
gun battle. BLA members are joined by two more and escape by stealing a car and machine gunning a
police radio car.

March 27. Brooklyn, NY – BLA members rob a supermarket.

April 10. Queens, NY – BLA members rob a bank.

April 12. Brooklyn, NY – Two telephone company men are held at gunpoint by the BLA when they are
suspected of being police. They are told that they would be killed if they have guns, radio or shields.

May 2. New Jersey Turnpike – Members of the BLA are arrested after a shoot out; one State
patrolman is killed, one is wounded; one BLA member dies, the driver; one escapes, but is
subsequently captured in East Brunswick, NJ.

May 19. Mount Vernon, NY – Two policemen are shot when they stop three BLA members pulling a
stick-up.

June 5. New York City – A transit detective is killed when he stops two BLA members from entering
without paying. Before he died he shot both of them; one is captured, and the other escapes.

June 7. Brooklyn, NY – A BLA member is captured by New York City police and FBI.

June 8. Brooklyn, NY – Two other BLA members are captured.

July 18. Bronx, NY – BLA members rob a bank.

September 2. New Orleans, La. – Members of New York City police department, New Orleans police
department and FBI capture a BLA member.

September 27. New York City – BLA member is charged with the murder of Patrolman Foster and
Laurie; he escapes from King’s County Hospital, but is captured on October 3.

November 7. New York City – BLA member is arrested as he attempts to turn himself in for being
absent leave from the Army.

November 14. Bronx, NY – Members of the Black Liberation Army are slain after three years of
pursuit by police; this member is the seventh BLA member to die in police shoot out, 18 others have
been arrested.

December 27. New York City – Three BLA sympathizers are caught attempting to free BLA
members from the Tombs when police see one of them emerging from a sewer manhole two blocks
away, outside the corrections department design and engineering unit that house blueprints.

1974:

April 17. New York City – The Tombs, four BLA sympathizers, armed with two hand-guns and
acetylene torch attempt to free three BLA members; they flee when the torch runs out of fuel.

May 3. New York City – After failing to release prisoners at the Tombs, BLA members flee to New
Haven, Connecticut where they rob a bank and shoot a policeman. Three are captured, others escape.

June 2. New York City – BLA members attempt to shoot two policemen on the Delaware Bridge, and
are arrested; they have a large supply of guns.

August 5. Brooklyn, NY – A female is arrested after attempting to smuggle hacksaw blades to BLA
prisoners.

August 15. Brooklyn, NY – One BLA member escapes, one is shot, and a third gives up after an
escape attempt. The escapee is captured a few blocks away.

October 20. Connecticut State Prison – A white female is arrested trying to smuggle a gun to BLA
prisoners.

1975:

February 17. Rikers Island, NY – BLA members subdued by guards after getting the keys (with a
wooden knife as a weapon) from a guard; police receive a telephone call soon after the incident saying
that five men armed with shotguns, one in wet suit, are setting off in three rafts; one raft is found with a
map, a set of oars, swim fins, (3) three .38 caliber bullets, and 9 mm bullets.

May 25. Brooklyn, NY – A Black Liberation Army member falls to his death in an escape attempt; a
second member is recaptured near the prison; two other BLA members return to their cells after the
one fell.

1976:

January 19. Trenton, NJ – At Trenton State Prison, there is an 11- hour shooting rampage; an inmate
was killed in the opening exchange of gunfire, was one inmate who began the incident by shooting a
guard in an escape attempt; another inmate who instigated the incident, was convicted of murdering a
State Trooper in a shoot out between BLA members and police on the New Jersey Turnpike; inmates
threw a homemade grenade at police and guards as they rescued a wounded guard.

The names of Comrades mentioned in these police reports have been omitted, as some are no longer functioning in the same capacity, imprisoned or dead. It is our policy not to reveal the names of Comrades who have acted within our organizational underground formations.

The defensive offensive launched in 1970-71 politico- military initiatives was based upon the degree of repression suffered in the Black community due to COINTELPRO police attacks. The politico military policy at that time was to establish a defensive (self defense) front that would offensively protect the interest of the above-ground political apparatus aspiration to develop a mass movement towards national liberation. Again, it must be stated that in the early seventies, the Black underground was the armed wing of the above-ground BPP, which because of the split and factionalism prevented adequate logistics, and communications between cadre(s) and focus in the Black underground in various parts of the country. It was this situation which caused the greatest problem to the advent of the Black Liberation Army, upon which the commencement of armed struggle could be said to be premature. Premature in the sense that subjectively, our capacity to wage a sustained protracted national liberation war was not possible. This was due to the split in the above-ground political apparatus, the Black underground still depending on the above-ground for logistics and communications; the Black underground comprising of militants who had not grown to political maturity, and without a politico military structure and strategy to merge the Black underground into a national formation employing both stable and mobile urban and rural guerilla warfare, in conjunction with the rising militancy of the oppressed masses. In the same regards, the objective reality for armed struggle was present, that being a historical transition evolving from the civil rights movement, the riotous 1960s, the creation of the BPP chapters in Black communities across the country of which fought bravely against police attacks, the mass mobilization in support of the Vietnamese national liberation war, etc. Hence, the commencement of armed struggle by our forces was according to the development of history.

By late 1971, it was ordered for the black underground to enter a strategic retreat, to reorganize itself and build a national structure, but the call for the strategic retreat for many cadres was too late. Many of the most mature militants were already deeply underground, separated from those functioning with the logistics provided by BPP chapters who in the split served to support armed struggle. The repression of the State continued to mount, especially now that the Black underground was hampered by internal strife with the loss of the above-ground political support apparatus (with virtually no support coming from existing Black community groups and organizations). It should be stated, a major contradiction was developing between the Black underground and those Euro-American forces who were employing armed tactics in support of Vietnamese liberation struggle. By 1973-75, this contradiction became full blown, whereby, specific Euro-American revolutionary armed forces refused to give meaningful material and political support to the Black Liberation Movement, more specifically, to the Black Liberation Army. Thereby, in 1974, the Black Liberation Army was without an above-ground political support apparatus; logistically and structurally scattered across the country without the means to unite its combat units; abandoned by Euro-American revolutionary armed forces; and being relentlessly pursued by the State reactionary forces – COINTELPRO (FBI, CIA and local police department). As a result, it was only a matter of time before the Black Liberation Army would be virtually decimated as a fighting clandestine organization

By 1974-75, the fighting capacity of the Black Liberation Army had been destroyed, but the BLA as a politico military organization had not been destroyed. Since those imprisoned continued escape attempts and fought political trials, which forged ideological and political theory concerning the building of the Black Liberation Movement and revolutionary armed struggle. The trials of Black Liberation Army members sought to place the State on trial, to condemn the oppressive conditions from which Black people had to eke out an existence in racist America. These trials went on for several years upon which the Courts and police used to embellish their position as being guardians of society. The State media publications projected the Black Liberation Army trials as justice being served to protect Black people from terrorism; to prevent these terrorists from starting racial strife between Black and white people; to protect the interest and lives of police who are responsible for the welfare of the oppressed communities, etc. The captured and confined BLA members were deemed a terrorist, a criminal, a racist, but never a revolutionary, never a humanitarian, never a political activist. But the undaunted revolutionary fervor of captured BLA members continued to serve the revolution even while imprisoned. By placing the State on trial the BLA was more able to expose the contradictions between the philosophy of the State to protect the rights of all people, and the actions of the State which are to only protect the rights of the capitalist class bourgeoisie. The BLA trials sought to undermine the State attempts to play-off the BLA as an insignificant group of crazies, and therefore the trials of BLA members became forums to politicize the masses of what the struggle and revolution is all about. The trials served to organize people to support those being persecuted and prosecuted by the State, as a means from which the oppressed masses would be able to protect themselves from future persecution. In this manner, the trials of the Black Liberation Army voiced the discontent, dissatisfaction, and disenfranchisement of Black people in racist America. By late 1975, the Black Liberation Army established a Coordinating Committee, which essentially comprised of imprisoned members and outside supporters gained during the years of political prosecution in the Courts. The first task of the Coordinating Committee was to distribute an ideological and political document depicting the theoretical foundations of the political determination of the Black Liberation Army. This document was entitled, “A MESSAGE TO THE BLACK MOVEMENT – A Political Statement from the Black Underground.” The Message to the Black Movement, put forth several political premises from which the BLA should be noted as a revolutionary political military organization fighting for national liberation of Afrikan people in the United States.

In late 1975 and 1976, the Coordinating Committee distributed the first BLA newsletter, an organizational publication for the purpose of forging ideological and political clarity and unity between BLA members captured and confined in various parts of the country. The BLA newsletter begun to serve as a means from which BLA members would voice their political understanding of the national liberation struggle, and in this way, for the entire organized body to share in ideas and strengthen our collective political determination as a fighting force. Over the years, the newsletter have served to help develop cadres inside and outside of prisons, and broaden the capacity from which the BLA could continue to serve the national liberation struggle. Also, in 1976, members of the Black Liberation Army launched a national campaign to petition the United Nations concerning the plight of political prisoners of war, and conditions of the U.S. penal system, in behalf of the prison movement. The U.N. Prisoners Petition Campaign, initiated and directed by members of the BLA, virtually revitalized the prison movement across the country, and forged impetus to the present Human Rights campaign to the United Nations. It was the U.N. Prisoners Petition Campaign that first called for an international investigation into the conditions of U.S. prisons, and called for the release of political prisoners of war to a on imperialist country that would accept them. (Consequently, this year another national campaign have been launched entitled – “National POW Amnesty Campaign”). Lastly, in 1976-77, the coordinating Committee distributed what had been termed a Study Guide to captured members of the BLA as a means to consolidate the ideological perspectives from which the BLA would provide political leadership to the national liberation struggle.

Since 1974, to the present, the BLA have continuously provided ideological and political perspectives within the Black Liberation Movement, and in this way gave leadership to the movement. Although, the Black Liberation Army is still lacking in principle support by progressive forces throughout the country. The primary aspect of lack of support is the fact the BLA still calls for the need of armed struggle, and the building of a revolutionary armed front. The Black Liberation Army is a politico military organization, which in the last five years have served to develop the political mass movement to merge with the political determination of the Black underground. The merger is based upon the development of a national politico-military strategy in unity with the aspirations and strategic initiatives of the various progressive political organizations throughout the country. Consistently, the Black Liberation Army has called for the development of the Black Liberation Front or Black United Front, a united front of Black revolutionary nationalists, establishing the political determination of the class and national liberation struggle towards independence, and for the freeing of the land. At this stage in struggle, there are several areas of progress being formulated that may serve to strengthen, consolidate, and mobilize the national liberation struggle under the aspirations of the oppressed Black masses. The building of the Afrikan National Prisoners Organization is a positive step on which various progressive Black forces can develop principled working relationships, alliances, and coalitions, and further build towards the Black Liberation Front. In the same regards, the development of the National Black Human Rights Coalition, provides a means from which a greater number of Black organizations and groups representing oppressed Black masses can be educated, organized, and mobilize to confront racist, capitalist imperialism, in conjunction to the heightened struggles in Namibia and Azania, and human rights violations here in North America. But it is imperative that these new formations develop a struggle line that supports the need for armed struggle to be waged in the United States, and therefore support of the oldest revolutionary armed force in North America – The Black Liberation Army.

It is practically 1980, and the Black Liberation Army (the Black underground) have been in existence for over ten years. The last ten years have been hard years of struggle, we have lost many Comrades, we have made many mistakes, but we have never lied nor compromised our principles in struggle. The growth and development of the BLA depends on the growth and development of the entire class and national liberation struggle. The means from which the BLA can build revolutionary armed struggle is based upon the willingness of the oppressed masses to support the BLA, to call for the BLA to act, to build areas of support in the work place, in the home, and the social places of entertainment, but most of all amongst the political organizations and groups that the oppressed masses are affiliated with. It is essential and necessary that the general mass and popular movement understand the need for revolutionary armed struggle/forces to exist, and that the existence of the Black Liberation Army is the criteria from which the class and national liberation struggle will be preserved, as the socio-economic conditions of U.S. monopoly capitalism worsens, and as racist repression intensifies. As mentioned earlier, another national political campaign has been launched, this new campaign calls for the release and/or exchange of captured members of the Black underground and other revolutionary forces across the country. But it must be understood the principal objective of this campaign is to also build support of revolutionary armed struggle, employing international law and politics (specifically, Protocols of the Geneva Accords) concerning the existence of political prisoners of war in the United States. Thereby, supporting the release of political prisoners of war brings understanding to how these revolutionaries came to be imprisoned, and the need for them to be released, as well as, the need for revolutionary armed struggle. This is the challenge in uniting the mass and popular movement under the auspices of building the Black Liberation Front, can only be objectively realized by supporting the re-emergence of the Black underground, the Black Liberation Army.

ORIGINALLY WRITTEN ON SEPTEMBER 18, 1979