The Daily Telegraph

MI5 ‘can’t stop terror in a free society’

- By Ben Farmer

TERRORIST attacks cannot be completely prevented in a free society, the head of MI5 has said, as he warned that online technology meant atrocities were being hatched in days.

Andrew Parker said the country was now facing an intense threat from violent Islamist extremists who were devising plots at a tempo he had not witnessed before in his 34-year career.

The Director General of the Security Service made a rare public appearance to outline the severity of the threat after four jihadist attacks that have killed 36 people since March.

A dramatic increase in the menace this year had seen attackers hatch plots in a matter of only days, he said. Mr Parker also warned that internet firms were inadverten­tly helping terrorists conspire and they now had an ethical responsibi­lity to help stop the worst excesses of criminal behaviour. He called on tech companies to help the Government tackle the “dark edges” of the online revolution, which was giving an advantage to violent extremists and enemy spies.

Mr Parker said the “dramatic upshift” in Islamist threats in 2017 meant there “is more terrorist activity coming at us more quickly and it can be harder to detect”.

Speaking in central London, he said MI5 and the police had halted 20 plots in the past four years, including seven since March, and would “continue to find and stop most attacks”. But he warned they could not be expected to intercept them all and it was likely more would follow.

He said: “Attacks will occur sometimes because this is a free society, a liberal democracy, and we do not monitor everybody all the time, and I wouldn’t wish to live in a country that was like that.

“I think we have to be careful that we don’t find ourselves being held to some sort of perfect standard of 100 per cent, because that just isn’t achievable.”

Mr Parker also pointed to the aid technology businesses were providing.

Companies such as Google and Whatsapp have been accused by ministers this year of doing too little to take down extremist content or of allowing terrorists a “safe space” to conspire using encrypted messages.

He said: “We all rely on myriad brilliant technologi­cal advances in everyday life, but an

unintended side-effect is that these advances also aid the terrorists.”

The ease of online buying, the propaganda potential of social media and the ability to send encrypted messages were all problems, Mr Parker said.

He said: “Addressing these challenges is about partnershi­ps and ethical responsibi­lity.

“No company wants to provide terrorists with explosive precursors. Social media platforms don’t want to host bomb-making videos.

“And communicat­ions providers do not want to provide the means for terrorists’ planning beyond the sight of MI5.”

He went on: “I believe that there is a responsibi­lity on the companies that offer those services to help government­s be able to stop the worst excesses of human criminal behaviour.”

Mr Parker said plots were being hatched both in the UK and overseas and ranged from complex, lengthy conspiraci­es to almost spontaneou­s acts of violence.

He said: “These threats are sometimes now coming at us more quickly, whether crude but lethal attack methods – for example using a knife or a vehicle – or more sophistica­ted plots when in today’s world terrorists can learn all that they need online to make explosives and build a bomb.

“Attacks can sometimes accelerate from inception through planning to action in just a handful of days. This pace, together with the way extremists can exploit safe spaces online, can make

‘Attacks can sometimes accelerate from inception through planning to action in just a handful of days’

threats harder to detect and give us a smaller window to intervene.”

Older security threats still remained, he said, with MI5 officers still working on Northern Ireland and counter espionage duties.

He said: “We continue to bear down on terrorism in Northern Ireland with our police partners, and to work against espionage and other clandestin­e activity by Russia and other foreign states who seek to do Britain harm.”

 ??  ?? Andrew Parker said the UK is facing an intense threat from terrorism
Andrew Parker said the UK is facing an intense threat from terrorism

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