We need more resources to deal with terror, says UK’s top police officer
Arena bomber ‘could have been stopped’
BRITAIN’S MOST senior police officer has called for new technology, better infrastructure and resources in the fight against terror after a report revealed MI5 was “actively” investigating the ringleader of the London Bridge atrocity at the time of the attack.
Metropolitan Police commissioner Cressida Dick described how the threat is posing “significant challenges”.
Yesterday, an official assessment of intelligence handling prior to four terrorist attacks between March and June this year confirms that three terrorists involved had at some point been on the radar of security services.
David Anderson QC wrote that the Manchester Arena bombing could have been stopped “had the cards fallen differently”.
In response, Ms Dick said: “Policing and our colleagues in the fight against terrorism will continue to learn and improve. We need to make rapid progress in implementing the recommendations, many of which require new technology, better infrastructures and resources at a time when the threat from terrorism poses significant challenges for police and security services.”
Separately, the Government says it will pay in full the £9.8m special grant funding requested by Greater Manchester Police to recognise officers’ “extraordinary response” to the Manchester Arena attack.
MI5 WAS “actively” investigating the ringleader of the London Bridge atrocity at the time of the rampage, while the Manchester bombing could have been stopped “had the cards fallen differently”, an official assessment has found.
It confirms that three terrorists involved in attacks that hit Britain between March and June this year had at some point been on authorities’ radar.
The UK’s security apparatus faced questions after dozens of victims were killed or injured in Westminster, Manchester, London Bridge and Finsbury Park.
MI5 and police launched independent reviews to examine what was known about the perpetrators before they struck and decisions made on intelligence.
An independent assessment of the findings by David Anderson QC, published yesterday, concludes that there is “no cause for despair”, saying most attacks continue to be successfully disrupted. But he notes that, other than in the case of Finsbury Park, it cannot be said that MI5 and police were “entirely blindsided”.
The report says: “Khalid Masood (Westminster) and Salman Abedi (Manchester) had both been subjects of interest, and Khuram Butt (London Bridge) remained under active investigation. Substantial and appropriate coverage was in place around key individuals, and mechanisms designed to assess risk were working as intended.
“MI5 and counter-terrorism policing got a great deal right; particularly in the case of Manchester, they could have succeeded had the cards fallen differently.”
In response to the findings, Home Secretary Amber Rudd said the blame for the attacks “lies squarely” with the terrorists.
Abedi was not under active investigation when he detonated a suicide device at Manchester Arena in May.
But Mr Anderson’s review says that MI5 came by unspecified intelligence in the months before the attack which, “had its true significance been properly understood”, would have caused an investigation into him to be opened.
The report says: “It is unknowable whether such an investigation would have allowed Abedi’s plans to be pre-empted and thwarted. MI5 assesses that it would not.”
Abedi was also identified by a separate “data-washing exercise” as falling within a small number of former subjects of interest who merited further consideration.
However, a meeting scheduled to consider the results of this process had not been held at the time of the bombing, in which 22 people were killed. An opportunity was also missed to place Abedi on “ports action” after he travelled to Libya in April.
The report says: “It is conceivable that the Manchester attack ... might have been averted had the cards fallen differently.”
Westminster attacker Masood was known to police and MI5 for association with extremists but he was a “closed” subject of interest at the time of the atrocity in March. Intelligence officers and police had no reason to anticipate his murderous actions.
It also reveals how, in the days prior to his attack, Masood conducted reconnaissance of Westminster Bridge in person and online. Minutes before he struck, the terrorist shared a “Jihad document” with numerous Whats App contacts.
Butt, who led the three-strong gang behind the London Bridge van and knife attack in June, was the principal subject of an MI5 investigation from mid-2015 until the date of the deadly assault.
The report says material relating to Butt received in the two weeks prior to the attack added little to the intelligence picture and did not identify activity that led up to it.
MI5 and counterterrorism policing got a great deal right. Counter-terrorism expert David Anderson QC, who conducted the review.