Daily Mail

I WILL NOT BACK DOWN

As enraged liberals attack Defence Secretary over his vow that British jihadis should be ‘eliminated’, he insists . . .

- By Larisa Brown Defence and Security Editor

THE Defence Secretary stood his ground last night in the face of a furious row over his suggestion British terrorists should be killed.

Gavin Williamson faced outrage from Labour and the legal establishm­ent for saying Britons who fought for Islamic State in Syria and Iraq were legitimate targets for military strikes. He said the UK should do everything it could to ‘eliminate that threat’.

Mr Williamson was accused of being ‘juvenile’ and of endorsing illegal action more suited to a ‘Netflix series’ after saying: ‘A dead terrorist can’t cause any harm to Britain.’

But he refused to back away from

his remarks and said he believed he had the backing of the public.

‘The British people want to make sure that our streets are safe,’ the Defence Secretary said. ‘The British people are incredibly proud of our Armed Forces, the work they do – making sure that the people who are a threat to this country are not able to continue to threaten this country.

‘That’s what the British people want to know that their Government is doing. That is what we will continue to do.’

Former military chiefs also supported Mr Williamson. Colonel Richard Kemp, who commanded UK forces in Afghanista­n, said: ‘We are fighting a war against these people. You don’t fight a war by constantly taking prisoners, you fight a war by killing your enemy.’

He added: ‘If you are dealing with terrorists who return from Syria and Iraq and try to prosecute them, it is very hard to get sufficient evidence to do so.

‘That’s a real danger, because it ends up with these returnees back on the street.’

The scale of the threat was graphicall­y illustrate­d by new figures yesterday, showing that terror arrests had soared to a record high. A total of 400 suspected extremists were held in counter-terror swoops in the year to September.

At the same time, experts said MI5 had the resources to fully monitor only one in every 50 of the 3,000 jihadis who spy chiefs consider worthy of active investigat­ion.

Mr Williamson’s remarks to the Mail sparked a fierce backlash yesterday, with the Defence Secretary accused of appearing to ‘endorse a clear breach of humanitari­an law’.

Lord Macdonald, the former Director of Public Prosecutio­ns, said suggesting dead terrorists could not cause any harm to Britain was a ‘juvenile response’.

He told the BBC: ‘We can’t simply say that everyone who has gone to Iraq will be hunted down and killed. That’s a juvenile response. A policy which says we will simply kill every individual who has travelled to Syria or to Iraq, even if they are surrenderi­ng, even if they have laid down their weapons, is really a policy that belongs in a Netflix series more seriously than it belongs in the range of policies that should be being applied by the UK Government.’

Liberal Democrat defence spokesman Lord Campbell said Mr Williamson’s comments were ‘ill-considered and appear to endorse a clear breach of humanitari­an law’. Labour MP and former paratroope­r Dan Jarvis said his comments were ‘morally, legally and practicall­y wrong’.

Even Cabinet colleague Boris Johnson appeared to distance himself from the comments, saying: ‘I think that ... Michael Fallon put it very well a few weeks ago when he said that anybody who goes to fight for Daesh in Syria or Iraq has got to understand that they are putting themselves in harm’s way and, indeed, making themselves legitimate targets of British Armed Forces, and that is the reality.’

Meanwhile, Britain’s terror watchdog Max Hill – who had said that some British jihadi fighters should be allowed home to re-join society – hit back by insisting that criminal prosecutio­n was ‘inevitable’ in most cases where UK citizens returned.

He tweeted: ‘Criminal prosecutio­n (is) inevitable in most cases where UK citizens return, and where evidence of committing serious criminal offences.’ This is despite the fact just eight of the estimated 400 British foreign fighters who have travelled to Syria and Iraq and since returned home have been convicted of an offence.

Theresa May’s official spokesman said: ‘The Government position on this has been made clear a number of times in recent months, which is that if you travel to Iraq and Syria and if you are fighting with our enemies there, then you make yourself a legitimate target.’

Philip Hammond has paid the money he owed to the Ministry of Defence for flying on RAF jets and is no longer banned from using them, it was claimed yesterday.

Mr Williamson told the Mail on Wednesday that ministers who did not pay for use of RAF jets ‘don’t get to use them’, escalating a row with the Chancellor.

But yesterday it emerged the Treasury had finally paid the bill.

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