The Jerusalem Post

UK spy chief says ISIS plotting attacks as Russia makes ‘desert’ of Syria

Expert claims Kremlin preventing defeat of Islamic State

- • By GUY FAULCONBRI­DGE

LONDON (Reuters) – ISIS is using turmoil sown by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s bombing in Syria to plot attacks against the United Kingdom and her allies, Britain’s foreign intelligen­ce M16 head Alex Younger said on Thursday.

In his first major public speech since winning the top job at the Secret Intelligen­ce Service in 2014, Younger said Russia and Syrian President Bashar Assad were hindering the defeat of jihadists by attempting to make a “desert” out of Syria.

“As I speak, the highly organized external attack planning structures within Daesh, even as they face military threat, are plotting ways to project violence against the UK and our allies without ever having to leave Syria,” Younger said at MI6’s Vauxhall Cross headquarte­rs in central London.

Younger cast Putin’s interventi­on on the side of Assad as a crude tactical ploy that aligned Russia with the minority Alawites whose members are viewed with suspicion among the majority Sunnis.

“In defining as a terrorist anyone who opposes a brutal government, they alienate precisely that group that has to be on side if the extremists are to be defeated,” he said. “Russia and the Syrian regime seek to make a desert and call it peace.”

Syria’s civil war, which began in 2011, has become a theater for competing global powers, with Russia and Iran supporting Assad, and the United States, Gulf Arab and European powers such as Britain backing rebels who want to depose him.

A career spy who joined MI6 as the Soviet Union was crumbling, Younger said civil war in Syria was a major threat to the United Kingdom which he said was facing an unpreceden­ted threat from terrorism including 12 foiled plots since June 2013.

Younger said he had been repeatedly asked about the future of intelligen­ce cooperatio­n with the United States and EU powers since the Brexit vote and Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidenti­al election.

“My answer is that I will aim for, and expect, continuity,” Younger said. “The need for the deepest cooperatio­n can only grow. And I am determined that MI6 remains a ready and highly effective partner.”

Younger, one of the West’s most powerful spies, said Britain faced “hybrid warfare” from unidentifi­ed hostile states through cyberattac­ks, propaganda and the subversion of the democratic process.

By inviting selected journalist­s to MI6’s green and cream Vauxhall Cross headquarte­rs for the first public speech by a serving chief, Younger sought to cast one of the most secretive organizati­ons on the planet as a diverse and dynamic spy service which was hiring the best.

He said the experience of the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, when flawed intelligen­ce was used as a justificat­ion for war, had shown that spies needed to speak truth to power and to challenge assumption­s.

“If we are doing our job, the facts we reveal to government and the choices they present will be uncomforta­ble,” he said.

MI6, depicted by novelists as the employer of some of the most memorable fictional spies from John le Carré’s George Smiley to Ian Fleming’s James Bond, operates overseas and is tasked with defending Britain and its interests.

But Younger had some bad news for those aspiring to be the maverick, hard-drinking, womanizing James Bond of Fleming’s novels: “Were Mr. Bond to apply to join MI6 now, he would have to change his ways.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A MOTORBOAT passes the MI6 building in London.
(Reuters) A MOTORBOAT passes the MI6 building in London.

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