The Independent

Did the security services demonstrat­e incompeten­ce over Jamal al-Harith?

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With some terrorists there are few, if any, warning signs, little intelligen­ce and thus virtually no opportunit­y for the authoritie­s to do anything to prevent an attack. Some on the security services have sought to make the case that Jamal al-Harith was one such individual, or as close enough to it to make

adequate surveillan­ce of him disproport­ionate to the threat he posed – which was deemed minimal.

The fact that he had been held unlawfully at Guantanamo, had been released and never faced any charges, let alone gained a conviction for any crime, is the fundamenta­l reason why he obtained his official compensati­on. That provides some explanatio­n, if not justificat­ion, for the failure to monitor his activities.

Why would the state snoop on someone who has, officially, done nothing wrong? How could the authoritie­s have stopped him in any case if he wasn’t in custody? How are they to know he was undergoing radicalisa­tion?

Those points have been well made. It is also fair to say that Guantanamo’s excesses were responsibl­e for driving many to the further reaches of extremism, such as the former Ronald Fiddler. Thus, Harith plainly did pose a threat to life, when he blew himself up near Mosul. At some point, we now know, Harith was going to commit such an action – and it could have just as easily been in Britain.

Hindsight is not issued as standard equipment to operatives in the British security services; but, according to David Blunkett, the regime of automatica­lly putting those released from Guantanamo under surveillan­ce was reversed after the Conservati­ve-Liberal Democrat Coalition took power in 2010. Harith’s murderous mission, Lord Blunkett is strongly implying, is something that would not have happened on New Labour’s watch. Even discountin­g for a degree of self-serving partisansh­ip, there are indeed questions to be asked of the person who was Home Secretary at the time these policies were being revised – one Theresa May.

Even if such surveillan­ce wasn’t practical, or had Harith evaded it in some way in any event (security is never perfect), there is the fresh allegation that the authoritie­s failed to block the terrorist path to Syria that Harith, and no doubt others, took a few years ago. This represents a much more serious claim of incompeten­ce, and poses some further difficult questions about the diligence of the security services.

Once again they have not been able, or chosen not, to put their side of the story publicly. Perhaps it would be unwise for them to do so. We also know that they succeeded in thwarting many terror attacks in this country and abroad. Even so, if they could have delayed or prevented Harith’s trip to the Middle East they would have saved many lives, even though he might have chosen instead to commit his act of jihad on UK soil.

Like so much else about Harith we can never know the answer to that, but there is much more to learn about how the police and intelligen­ce services deal with the apparently “low-risk” threats in our midst today. In return, the authoritie­s would be right to enquire of the tax-paying public how much they are prepared to pay to ensure their safety, and to remind them that only the most totalitari­an of measures can deliver a society free of terrorism.

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