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UK INTELLIGEN­CE CHIEF OUTLINES THREATS, URGES MORE DIVERSITY

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Britain’s Secret Intelligen­ce Service director used a rare public speech to outline threats facing Britain and the need for more diversity in secret agent ranks.

MI6 chief Alex Younger, known by the code name “C”, told students at his alma mater, the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, that Britain will fortify its intelligen­ce ties to European counterpar­ts even though Britain is leaving the European Union next year.

“The implicatio­ns of the Brexit debate have been set out by ministers,” Younger said in his second speech since taking the top job at Britain’s internatio­nal intelligen­ce service four years ago.

“For our part as SIS, we will always work with our sister agencies to strengthen our indispensa­ble security ties in Europe.”

He said adversarie­s like Russia view themselves as being in a state of “perpetual confrontat­ion” with Britain and the West. He cited the “flagrant hostile act” of the use of the lethal nerve agent Novichok on ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the English city of Salisbury as a prime example.

The spymaster said MI6 helped expose the perpetrato­rs and coordinate the expulsion of Russian diplomats from NATO nations and other allies that followed the British government’s determinat­ion that the Russian state was likely behind the attack. The expulsions damaged Russia’s intelligen­ce gathering, he said.

“Our intention is for the Russian state to conclude that, whatever benefits it thinks it is accruing from this activity, they are not worth the risk,” he said.

He encouraged students to seek employment at MI6 even if they don’t fit the typical profile of an intelligen­ce officer.

“I want to speak to young people who have never seen themselves in MI6. It doesn’t matter where you are from,” he said. “If you want to make a difference and you think you might have what it takes, then the chances are that you do have what it takes, and we hope you will step forward.”

MI6 deals with internatio­nal security challenges. The official threat level in Britain is set at “severe,” indicating that intelligen­ce analysts believe an attack is highly likely.

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