The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Dark times but we cannot give in to fear

- By SIR BERNARD HOGAN-HOWE

WE HAVE all watched the recent terrorist atrocities unfold with a terrifying and depressing sense of horror and dread.

I know that with each new outrage, and especially those on our doorstep on the Continent, there is a greater sense of fear that Britain will be the next victim in this wave of mindless mass murder.

I feel and understand that fear, and as the police officer in charge of helping to prevent such an attack, I know you want me to reassure you. I am afraid I cannot do that entirely. Our threat level has been at ‘Severe’ for two years. It remains there. It means an attack is highly likely – you could say it is a case of when, not if.

But where I can offer reassuranc­e is in answering the other questions I know you so often ask – why and how has it not happened here yet? What are we doing to prevent it? How will the police protect me when it does?

What I can say is that we have not had a terrorist murder since the barbaric attack on Fusilier Lee Rigby on May 22, 2013, in Woolwich. I can point to the plots we have foiled and the potential terrorists we have put behind bars after we discovered their advanced plans to murder officers leaving Shepherd’s Bush police station to walk their beats.

Another plot involved a Britishbas­ed terrorist planning to carry out a Lee Rigby-style attack on US soldiers based in East Anglia using a car and knives to murder the servicemen and potentiall­y detonate a bomb. He was thwarted thanks to joint work by the police and MI5.

When I was a beat bobby in South Yorkshire, my starting point had to be that I wanted to stop the bad guys and the gangs before they bullied the families on my patch. Now, like then, I don’t want to admit that any crime, let alone these kinds of terrorist atrocities, is likely to happen on our watch – but that is what the ‘Severe’ threat level means. However, there are lots of things working in our favour. The relationsh­ip between MI5, MI6 and our police is a world-beater. It has given us an advantage in intelligen­ce and ultimately foiling plots. My team at Scotland Yard co-ordinates the national police effort across the country, working with specialist hubs in other regions.

In short, we have a profession­al, joined-up, national network of intelligen­ce-led investigat­ions.

Our gun controls and the simple fact we are an island mean that terrorists in the UK would struggle to get the firearms required to repeat attacks similar to those we have seen on the Continent. This gives a solid base as it means the UK environmen­t is immediatel­y hostile to the terrorist.

I would also add to this the British way of life and culture. First, the vast majority of our officers are unarmed – I believe this gives us a far healthier relationsh­ip with the people we police. Our neighbourh­ood officers – the ones who know their local streets and names of many of the people in their communitie­s – are our major weapon. They are our eyes and ears.

Second, it is our tolerance and acceptance. Our approach to Muslims is no different because these attacks purport to be committed in the name of Islam. We don’t stigmatise the millions of British Muslims whose values and faith completely reject the terrorists’ litany of hate.

We are a nation that accepts difference but builds communitie­s with shared values. We should be proud of that – it is another reason why the UK is a hostile

environmen­t for those intent on terrorism. It means the vigilance of our officers is backed up by millions more eyes and ears. These are whole communitie­s united in defeating terrorism.

But even with this solid foundation to prevent attack, I have renewed our focus on what we will do when terrorists breach these defences.

Within hours of the terrible events in Paris last November, I recognised that the attack we had witnessed just 200 miles from London required a huge response.

So we have increased the number of specially trained and equipped officers who would confront heavily armed terrorists.

Initially this was through longer shifts. Now, our resilience has increased as all officers who carry a gun have been trained to take the initiative in the face of a new terrorist threat.

Meanwhile, we are training hundreds of extra officers so they are ready to supplement our numbers during an attack similar to that seen in Paris. This increases armed officers by 600 to 2,800 in the London area alone.

It also improves our firearms capacity significan­tly at a time of crisis. Although we can’t talk about the tactics of how many armed officers we have on the street at any one time, our capacity to confront the most terrible of threats is increasing threefold. For the first time, our team of Counter Terrorism Specialist Firearms Officers, who train for the very worst attacks, are ready 24 hours a day. They have the advanced skills needed to tackle the toughest of challenges.

All of the UK’s armed officers are brave men and women who have volunteere­d to put themselves on this new and evershifti­ng front line.

We tell the public to ‘Run, Hide, Tell’. We ask these officers to run in the opposite direction to you. They are paid no more for this. They have families. They are as attached to living life as all of us, but they do this for you. They do this knowing that their splitsecon­d decisions will be scrutinise­d in investigat­ions that can sometimes last many years. I’m sure they have your gratitude.

I realise that some of what I am telling you today is not reassuring. I hope that some of it is more so.

The threat we all face is very real. No one watching events on the Continent can think otherwise, but it is important we have a shared understand­ing of the work that goes on every day to stop attacks happening and to prepare for the time we are faced with this terrifying threat.

Britain is a vibrant country. I am especially proud to help police it. It is a place the world wants to visit and invest in – and rightly so. Help us keep it that way – be our eyes and ears against terror. But also enjoy the UK. We should be positive and relish our freedoms.

Yes, these can feel like dark and desperate times. But defeating terrorism is as much about refusing to be afraid as anything else.

Refusing to change our beliefs, our values and our way of life. We will not become like them. We will not hate. We will not be cowed. And because of this they will never win.

If you see anything suspicious, call the Anti-Terrorist Hotline on 0800 789321 or 101, or in an emergency dial 999.

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