Security chiefs: we don't have enough spies to tackle terror threat

 
<http://news.scotsman.com/topstories/Security-chiefs-we-don39t-have.3739088.
jp>
http://news.scotsman.com/topstories/Security-chiefs-we-don39t-have.3739088.j
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By Richard Elias
SECURITY chiefs have admitted that at least 2,000 terrorists are on the
loose in the UK and they do not have enough officers to properly track their
movements.

SECURITY chiefs have admitted that at least 2,000 terrorists are on the
loose in the UK and they do not have enough officers to properly track their
movements.

A report from a House of Commons committee also warns that other threats
such as organised crime are not being properly tackled because of the scale
of Islamist extremism.

The admissions are contained in the Intelligence and Security Committee
(ISC) report for 2006-07, which is based on evidence from top MI5 and MI6
officials.

The authors of the report, which has been passed to Prime Minister Gordon
Brown, openly admit there is no guarantee that further atrocities such as
7/7 can be prevented in the UK.

The report states: "To give an idea of the scale of the threat, there are
approximately 200 extremist networks currently under investigation, some of
which have both the intent and the capability to carry out attacks against
the UK or UK interests overseas. There will be still others about which
little or nothing is known."

The report reveals the total number of security service personnel - MI5, MI6
and dedicated police - is around 3,200, although a further 690 will be
recruited over the next 12 months.

Ever since the end of the Troubles in Northern Ireland, much of MI5's work
has been redirected towards combating crimes such as major narcotics
trafficking and organised crime.

However, since the rise in the terror threat, manpower is being transferred
away from these fields, as highlighted by an unidentified member of the
Security Services who addressed the committee. 

He told members: "I think the scale of the international terrorist threat at
the moment is such - and the consequences, if we are unable to manage it
successfully nationally I think, are so severe - that we have not had any
choice but to prioritise other areas. Some of the changes, I suspect,
probably will not quickly reverse. I suspect we will be quite slow to get
back into serious crime work, for instance.

"We are concerned that aspects of key intelligence and security work are
suffering as a consequence of the focus on counter-terrorism priorities."

Fighting international counter-terrorism makes up 80% of the Security
Services's annual workload, a 10% increase on 2005-06, says the report.

According to the report, a "former director-general" of the Security Service
(MI5] reported to the committee that: "My main concern has been and still is
we do not have enough people to do the job."

But the unidentified former chief warned that although recruitment to the
service was being increased, it was important to ensure the quality of new
staff remained high.

The speaker added: "Maintaining standards is incredibly important because
people get access to secrets and responsibility and the capacity to make a
major mistake very early on."

The chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, the SIS, or MI6, John
Scarlett, told MPs that a specialist unit of his department had been set up
to target extremism in the UK.

He said the move had been made to "illuminate. the interface between
al-Qaeda and radicalised British Muslims essentially to catch the connection
between. the domestic aspect of the threat and the overseas aspect of the
threat".

But the committee was told that "SIS's greater focus on counter-terrorism
has led to a significant increase in the number of direct 'disruption
operations' against terrorist targets throughout the year.

"The total number of these operations has increased by almost 50% compared
with the previous year, and the number of these operations judged to have
caused 'significant disruption' to the terrorist targets has almost
doubled."

But MPs were told these successes have come at a price, with inquiries using
up large amounts of the annual budget. Among these investigations was
'Operation Crevice', which led to the jailing of five men for their part in
a plot to blow up targets such as the Bluewater Shopping Centre in Kent and
the Ministry of Sound nightclub in London.

Last night, security consultant Stuart Crawford told Scotland on Sunday:
"You cannot not take all of these groups seriously.

"The terrorists only need to get it right once but the security services
need to get it right every time."

He continued: "All the implications are that Islamic terrorist movements who
are working across the globe are targeting the UK and the US because of
their involvement in Afghanistan. And it is only to be expected that the
security services, as a result of this, are having to prioritise what they
investigate."

Another terrorism expert, David Capitanchik, said he was not surprised at
MI5's claims they did not have sufficient numbers to tackle the threat. "One
problem for MI5 is that it takes between six and nine months to recruit one
counter-terrorism employee.

"There is a whole process which must be followed to ensure that recruits are
not terrorists themselves.

"There are two main problems. Firstly, there are not enough resources for
counter-terrorism, and secondly, we have allowed all sorts of people into
the country who are wanted for terrorism in their own countries."

Capitanchik added: "It will take a long time to deal with this problem.
There are so many people that we need to put under surveillance and there
may be other groups operating on university campuses and in mosques that we
just do not know about."

The full article contains 935 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday
newspaper.
Last Updated: 02 February 2008 9:35 PM
  _____  


Terror czar warns of changing threat


 
<http://news.scotsman.com/topstories/Terror-czar-warns-of-changing.3739086.j
p>
http://news.scotsman.com/topstories/Terror-czar-warns-of-changing.3739086.jp

 <javascript: ViewGallery();> 
By Richard Elias
MUSLIM fanatics in Scotland could be radicalised within weeks, the country's
terror czar has warned. And John Corrigan stressed that the exact potential
of the threat is constantly changing and can never be quantified.
He spoke to Scotland on Sunday just six weeks before retiring as Scotland's
counter-terrorism chief, having spent four years in the post overseeing such
operations as the arrest of Mohammed Atif Siddique and the inquiry into the
would-be car bombing of Glasgow Airport.

Recent research has shown the time it takes for an individual to show an
initial interest in fundamentalism to actively taking part in an attack is
reducing all the time.

Several years ago, experts figured that period may be up to 18 months but
now with perceived threats to Muslims being featured virtually daily on our
television screens, that timescale is down to just a few weeks.

In his first interview since the attacks on Glasgow Airport in June,
Corrigan, who is also assistant chief constable of Strathclye Police, said:
"There were some benchmarks up until 9/11 but, recently, it would be
possible to find someone willing to involve themselves in a terrorist act in
a much shorter timescale. That makes the challenge facing policing a bit
more acute."

Corrigan said it was impossible to state with any conviction how many
suspects were active in Scotland at any time.

He added: "I cannot quantify how many suspects we have in Scotland.

There is simply no way, short of getting access to the detailed plans of
those who want to do harm to the UK, of telling how many individuals there
are in this position. And it is not possible to separate Scotland from the
rest of the UK. But it would be an act of the utmost complacency that
Scotland is at risk any less than the rest of the UK."

Unlike England and Wales, Scotland does not have a dedicated
Counter-Terrorism Unit but Corrigan said this, in no way, made the country
more susceptible to attack. He explained: "We have decided not to create
large, stand-alone units for counter-terrorism. We believe every police
officer in Scotland is a counter-terrorism officer."

The full article contains 371 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday
newspaper.
Last Updated: 02 February 2008 9:39 PM
 
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