Edward Snowden/ British Spy Agencies
Australia must give a big cheer to the whistle-blower Ed Snowden for his hand in outing 3 top British spies!!!!!!!!
Clearly we all have to laugh at the comments that Mr Snowden has caused such KAOS and given a gift to Al-Qaeda
Clearly
Brtitian and the United states have failed to learn any lessons that
many of the so called " Terrorist" attacks are retaliation for
attrocities carried out in the name of the Amercian or British Governments.
It
is also clearly evident that the life of a person from the Middle East
, Pakistan, Afghanistan is worth considerably less than the lives of
people in countries that believe they actually rule the
world!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
So where is MAXWELL SMART when you need him?????????????
London: Britain's top spy chiefs said in a rare
televised appearance Thursday that the intelligence leaks by Edward
Snowden have left its enemies "rubbing their hands with glee" and caused
terror groups to change the way they communicate.
The heads of
foreign spy agency MI6, its domestic counterpart MI5 and electronic
eavesdropping agency GCHQ also denied in their evidence to parliament's
Intelligence and Security Committee that Britons were subject to mass
surveillance.
In a hearing held under tight security and with a
two-minute time delay to prevent accidental disclosures, MI6 boss John
Sawers said Snowden's revelations of mass US and British surveillance
programmes were a gift to Al-Qaeda and other terrorists.
"The
leaks from Snowden have been very damaging, they put our operations at
risk. Our adversaries are rubbing their hands with glee. Al-Qaeda is
lapping it up," Sawers told the committee.
GCHQ boss Iain Lobban
added that the revelations by the fugitive US leaker had led "terrorist
groups" in the Middle East, Afghanistan and elsewhere to modify the way
they communicate.
"We have intelligence on (and) we have actually
seen chat around specific terrorist groups, including closer to home,
discussing how to avoid what they now perceive to be vulnerable
communications methods," Lobban said.
Snowden, a former US
National Security Agency (NSA) contractor who has been granted temporary
asylum in Russia, has revealed massive US electronic surveillance
programmes in recent months, sending shockwaves around the world.
The
leaks have strained Washington's ties with its allies over suggestions
that it has eavesdropped on dozens of world leaders, including by
tapping the mobile phone of German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Thursday's
hearing marked an unprecedented joint public appearance for the heads
of the three British intelligence agencies, who could be seen on
television sitting in a row as they answered questions from lawmakers.
They insisted that they worked hard to balance national security with citizens' right to privacy.
"We
do not spend our time listening to the telephone calls or reading the
emails of the majority. It would not be proportionate, it would not be
legal. We do not do it," Lobban told the committee.
Spying activity 'proportionate to threats'
MI5
director general Andrew Parker insisted that the work of the
intelligence services was a "proportionate" response to the terrorist
threats faced by Britain.
"The suggestion that what we do is
somehow compromising freedom and democracy -- of course we believe the
opposite is the case," Parker told the committee.
"The work we do is proportionate judged against the necessity of protecting against these threats."
Sawers emphatically denied that British agents used torture as a means of countering threats to national security.
"We're absolutely clear we only operate within the framework of the law," he told the committee.
"Would
we pursue a situation that we knew would lead to mistreatment or
torture of an individual to get terrorist threat intelligence? The
answer is absolutely not.
"We do not participate in, incite, encourage or condone mistreatment or torture, and that is absolute."
Britain's security services operate under "very strong ethical standards", he said.
The MI6 boss identified "al-Qaeda and its many, many branches" as the biggest threat to British security.
"There
are also states out there that are trying to do us harm, through
cyber-attacks, by acquiring nuclear weapons or involved in generating
instability in parts of the world important to us," he added.
The
televised proceedings were subject to a delay to prevent any
information that compromised national security from being accidentally
broadcast, committee chairman Malcolm Rifkind said.
The three spymasters have until now given evidence to the committee in private because of the sensitive nature of their work.
GCHQ
has faced questions in recent weeks because Snowden's leaks have
suggested close collaboration between the British listening post and its
US counterpart, the NSA, to harvest vast quantities of data from
ordinary citizens' communications.
Britain has faced questions
from Berlin this week following a media report that London has been
operating a secret listening post from its Berlin embassy.
The
German government called in Britain's ambassador for questioning over
the report by Britain's Independent newspaper, which was said to be
based in part on leaked documents from Snowden.
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