Britain foiled about seven attacks
BRITISH security services have foiled about seven terror attacks since June, with fighters returning from Syria posing a growing threat, Prime Minister David Cameron said yesterday.
“Our security and intelligence services have stopped something like seven attacks in the last six months, albeit attacks planned on a smaller scale” than Friday’s attacks in Paris, he told BBC Radio 4 from Turkey.
“We have been aware of these cells operating in Syria that are radicalising people in our own countries, potentially sending people back to carry out attacks,” he said.
Security services had spent a “long time” working out how to deal with multiple coordinated attacks on the street, but would have to go “right back to the drawing board” after the Paris attacks, which killed at least 129 people.
“It was the sort of thing we were warned about,” the prime minister said.
Cameron said there were hopeful signs from Saturday’s talks in Vienna on Syria that progress was being made on how to deal with the Islamic State (IS), and that he was to speak with Russian Vladimir Putin later yesterday.
“You can’t deal with so-called Islamic State unless you get a political settlement in Syria that enables you then to permanently degrade and destroy that organisation,” he said.
However, he repeated that any settlement had to include the removal of Syrian President Bashar alAssad, a sticking point between the West and Russia.
Britain is to recruit an extra 1 900 security and intelligence staff to counter the threat of terrorist violence following the Paris attacks, British media reported yesterday.
It would be “the biggest increase in British security spending since the 7/7 bombings in London” which killed dozens in 2005. The measures were expected to be announced by Cameron later yesterday, according to the Guardian.
“I am determined to prioritise the resources we need to combat the terrorist threat because protecting the British people is my number one duty as prime minister,” Cameron was expected to say, according to the newspaper.
He later told the BBC that Islamist terrorism was “the struggle of our generation”.
“This disease is a challenge we are going to have to face with everything we have got,” Cameron said.
“We will do everything we can to make sure we keep our people safe, but we live in a very, very dangerous world.”
The recruitment would increase the staff of intelligence agencies MI5, MI6 and GCHQ by about 15%, according to the Guardian and the Financial Times.
In addition, extra aviation security officers would assess airports around the world, in response to the crash of a Russian plane in Egypt last month that the British government suspects might have been downed by a bomb. — AFP