23/09/2016
23/09/2016

LONDON, Sept 22, (Agencies): The Islamist terrorist threat to the West will endure for years to come because simply taking back territory from Islamic State will not solve the deeper global fractures which have fostered militants, Britain’s foreign intelligence chief has said. In his first public comments outside Britain, the head of the Secret Intelligence Service said globalisation, the information revolution, a deepening sectarian divide in the Middle East and failed states would ensure that terrorism remained a threat.
When asked by the Central Intelligence Agency Director John Brennan at a panel discussion in Washington whether the apex of the Islamist terrorist trajectory had been reached, MI6 chief Alex Younger said: “Regrettably this is an enduring issue which will certainly be with us for our professional lifetime.”
Forecast
Younger, as chief of MI6, is one of the West’s most powerful spies and rarely speaks in public. He was appointed in 2014 by then prime minister David Cameron. MI6 operates overseas and is tasked with defending Britain and its interests. Younger said terrorism was fuelled by a host of fractures across the world.
Economic
“There will be two sorts of intelligence services: those that understand this fact and have prospered and those that don’t and haven’t. I am determined that MI6 will be in the former category.” An economics graduate and former soldier, Younger has worked for MI6 in Europe, the Middle East and Afghanistan since 1991, according to a short biography released by the government at the time of his appointment as MI6 chief.
Britain’s foreign intelligence service is to get 40 percent more spies in one of the biggest expansions since the Cold War as MI6 seeks to harness new technology, the BBC said. The Secret Intelligence Service, or MI6, will see its numbers increase to a little under 3,500 by 2020 from around 2,500, the BBC said, citing unidentified sources. MI6 does not disclose its staff numbers. MI6, depicted by novelists as the employer of some of the most memorable fictional spies from John le Carré’s George Smiley to Ian Fleming’s James Bond, operates overseas and is tasked with defending Britain and its interests.