Portsmouth News

‘Bumbling’ official has clearance suspended

Secret papers left at bus stop

- By TOM COTTERILL Defence correspond­ent tom.cotterill@thenews.co.uk

A BUMBLING Whitehall bureaucrat who left top secret military documents about a Royal Navy warship at a bus stop has had their security clearance suspended, a defence minister has revealed.

The incompeten­t official, who has not been named, has been removed from ‘all sensitive work’ within the Ministry of Defence, Baroness Annabel Goldiehass­aid.

As previously reported, the classified documents – 50 pages in all – were left in a ‘soggy pile’ at a bus stop in Kent last month.

The secret files included details about how strategy chiefs thought Russia would react to HMS Defender’s passage through Ukrainian waters off the Crimea coast.

The documents, which were recovered by a member of the public, also detailed plans for a possible UK military presence in Afghanista­n after the US-led Nato operation there ended.

The intelligen­ce slip-up prompted a major investigat­ion within the MoD, which Baroness Goldie said had now ‘concluded'.

In a written response to parliament, the Tory peer said: ‘The investigat­ion has independen­tly confirmed the circumstan­ces of the loss, including the management of the papers within the department, the location at which the papers were lost and the manner in which that occurred.

‘These are consistent with the events self-reported by the individual.

‘We are confident that we have recovered all the secret papers.

‘The investigat­ion has found no evidence of espionage; and has concluded there has been no compromise of the papers by our adversarie­s.

‘The individual concerned has been removed from sensitive work and has already had their security clearance suspended pending a full review.’

She added the MoD would be making ‘no further comment’ on the incident and insisted the department takes the protection of its informatio­n ‘extremely seriously’.

The files left at the bus stop included emails and PowerPoint presentati­ons, originated in the office of a senior official at the MoD.

The documents relating to the Portsmouth-based Type 45 destroyer, HMS Defender, show that a mission described by the MoD as an ‘innocent passage through Ukrainian territoria­l waters’, with guns covered and the ship's helicopter stowed in its hangar, was

conducted in the expectatio­n that Russia might respond aggressive­ly.

 ??  ?? PASSAGE Type 45 destroyer HMS Defender
PASSAGE Type 45 destroyer HMS Defender

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