M-I5 Said Iraq Exacerbated the Threat from International Terrorism
      
		
        By David Morrison
		ccun.org, November 16, 2008
		
        
 
MI5 said Iraq “exacerbated the threat from international 
		terrorism”
 
Stella Rimington, the last but one head of MI5, was 
		interviewed by Decca Aikenhead in The Guardian on 18 October 2008.  
		She asked her about the effect of Britain’s invasion of Iraq on the 
		terrorist threat to Britain:
 
“I ask Rimington what importance 
		she would place on the war, in terms of its impact on the terrorist 
		threat. She pauses for a second, then replies quietly but firmly: ‘Look 
		at what those people who've been arrested or have left suicide videos 
		say about their motivation. And most of them, as far as I'm aware, say 
		that the war in Iraq played a significant part in persuading them that 
		this is the right course of action to take. So I think you can't write 
		the war in Iraq out of history. If what we're looking at is groups of 
		disaffected young men born in this country who turn to terrorism, then I 
		think to ignore the effect of the war in Iraq is misleading.”
		
		[1]
 
Decca Aikenhead seemed to be surprised at this 
		forthright assertion by an ex-head of MI5 of a causal connection between 
		Britain’s invasion and occupation of Iraq and the heightened terrorist 
		threat to Britain.  She commented:
 
“These might not be 
		unremarkable views for most Guardian readers - of whom Rimington is one. 
		But according to Rimington, they are widely held within the intelligence 
		service - much more so than most members of the public, and perhaps 
		particularly Guardian readers, ever suspect.”
 
Official MI5 view
		In fact, it is the official view of MI5, and has been for several years, 
		that such a causal connection exists.  I know that because I read 
		it on MI5’s website in July 2005, at the time of the London bombings.  
		There, on a page entitled Threat to the UK from International Terrorism, 
		I read:
 
“In recent years, Iraq has become a dominant issue for a 
		range of extremist groups and individuals in the UK and Europe.”
 
		I was astonished to read this since it acknowledged that al-Qaeda 
		activity was, at least in part, a reaction to Western interference in 
		the Muslim world, rather than driven by an evil ambition to destroy our 
		way of life in the West, as our political leaders kept telling us.
 
		At that time, Prime Minister Blair was (understandably) trying to deny 
		the existence of a connection between the invasion of Iraq and the 
		bombings in London on 7 July 2005, lest somebody accuse him of having 
		blood on his hands.  That was not an unreasonable accusation, given 
		that, having been warned in advance by the intelligence services that 
		the threat from al-Qaida “would be heightened by military action against 
		Iraq” (see Intelligence & Security Committee report of 11 September 2003
		
		[2], Paragraph 126), he chose to make Britain a less safe place by 
		invading Iraq in March 2003.  
 
I made considerable efforts 
		to draw the attention of The Guardian and other newspapers to the 
		extraordinary fact that the words coming out of the Prime Minister’s 
		mouth were at variance with what was published on the MI5 website.  
		This seemed to me to be newsworthy.  But to no avail.  To the 
		best of my knowledge, this plain, publicly stated, view of MI5 was never 
		quoted in the columns of The Guardian, until a letter by me was 
		published on 3 July 2007
		
		[3].  That Guardian readers are ignorant of MI5’s view on the 
		issue is due to the failure of Guardian journalists to bring it to their 
		readers’ attention.
 
International Terrorism: Impact of Iraq
		Lest there is any doubt that the intelligence services have long held 
		the view that invading Iraq increased the terrorist threat to Britain, 
		listen to this from a Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) assessment 
		entitled International Terrorism: Impact of Iraq dated April 2005, 
		extracts of which were published in The Sunday Times on 2 April 2006:
		 
“Iraq is likely to be an important motivating factor for some time 
		to come in the radicalisation of British Muslims and for those 
		extremists who view attacks against the UK as legitimate.”
 
		“There is a clear consensus within the UK extremist community that Iraq 
		is a legitimate jihad and should be supported. Iraq has re-energised and 
		refocused a wide range of networks in the UK.”
 
“We judge that 
		the conflict in Iraq has exacerbated the threat from international 
		terrorism and will continue to have an impact in the long term. It has 
		reinforced the determination of terrorists who were already committed to 
		attacking the West and motivated others who were not.”
 
“Some 
		jihadists who leave Iraq will play leading roles in recruiting and 
		organising terrorist networks, sharing their skills and possibly 
		conducting attacks. It is inevitable that some will come to the UK.”
		
		[4]
 
Blair’s blowback
Even Tony Blair eventually 
		acknowledged that his military adventures in the Muslim world had 
		produced “blowback”.  Here’s is what he said in his resignation 
		speech in Sedgefield on 10 March 2007:
 
“Removing Saddam and his 
		sons from power, as with removing the Taliban, was over with relative 
		ease.  But the blowback since, from global terrorism and those 
		elements that support it, has been fierce and unrelenting and costly.”
		[5]
		 
The Guardian has yet to report this confession by the former Prime 
		Minister that he has made Britain a less safe by his military 
		interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq and, in the process, he has caused 
		the deaths of around 400 British soldiers, and hundreds of thousands of 
		Afghans and Iraqis.
 
Crucial point erased
Today, the MI5 
		website still has a page about “international terrorism”
		[6], but you 
		won’t find a word about Iraq on it.  The previous plain statement 
		by MI5 that there was a causal connection between Iraq and the risk of 
		terrorism in Britain was removed some time since June 2007, when I last 
		saw it there.  Now al-Qaeda’s motivation is described in the 
		following terms:
 
“The terrorists draw their inspiration from a 
		global message articulated by figures such as Usama bin Laden. The 
		message is uncompromising and asserts that the West represents a threat 
		to Islam; that loyalty to religion and loyalty to democratic 
		institutions and values are incompatible; and that violence is the only 
		proper response.”
 
It doesn’t quite go so far as to say that 
		al-Qaeda is out to destroy our way of life in the West, but the crucial 
		point – that al-Qaeda terrorism in the West is a response to Western 
		interference in the Muslim world – has been erased.
 
Jacqui Smith 
		speaks
Fresh from her ignominious defeat in the House of Lords on 
		42-day detention on 13 October 2008, the Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, 
		made a major speech on “the threat of international terrorism” to 
		Britain on 15 October 2008
		[7].  
		Like the MI5 website today, her speech omits to mention British 
		intervention in Afghanistan and Iraq as a motivating force for al-Qaeda 
		activity in Britain.  In a 3,000-word speech, she provided the 
		following penetrating analysis of what drives al-Qaeda to commit 
		terrorism:
 
“They want a reordering of global political 
		structures and a separation of faith groups …. and to subvert our 
		institutions.”
		
        Most of her speech was taken up with detailing the measures she was 
		taking to counter al-Qaeda in Britain.  Four regional 
		counter-terrorism policing hubs, in London, Manchester, Birmingham and 
		Leeds have been established and a fifth one is on the way on the M4 
		corridor. These are tasked “not only to investigate conspiracies and 
		terrorist operations but to understand radicalisation and radicalisers 
		and to tackle them effectively”.
		
        Several Government departments are also involved in countering “radicalisation”:
      
		
        The Department for Children Schools and Families in providing advice to 
		teachers on how to deal with signs of radicalisation; the Department for 
		Innovation, Universities and Skills in working with student bodies and 
		higher and further education to do something rather similar; the 
		Department for Culture, Media and Sport in considering what impact the 
		issue of counter radicalisation should have on their programmes; ditto 
		the Department for Work and Pensions and the Department of Health; the 
		Department of Justice is addressing the problem of radicalisation in 
		prisons; and, last but not least, the Department for Communities and 
		Local Government is working on the Preventing Violent Extremism plan.  
		And she holds “a Weekly Security Meeting with senior representatives 
		from each of these Departments and others across Whitehall to discuss 
		their work and the current threat with the police and the security and 
		intelligence agencies”.
		
        How any of this is meant to reduce or prevent “radicalisation” in 
		circumstances in which the main driver – the occupation of Afghanistan 
		and Iraq – is still going on is not clear.  Withdrawal from Iraq 
		and Afghanistan would certainly diminish, and perhaps eliminate, the 
		threat to Britain from al-Qaeda.  In other words, if we ceased 
		spending money and blood invading Muslim countries, we wouldn’t need to 
		spend money protecting the British homeland from terrorism emanating 
		from the Muslim world in response – and blood would not be spilled on 
		our streets when the protection proves to be fallible. 
 
David 
		Morrison
 
References:
		
        
		[1]  
		www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/oct/18/iraq-britainand911
		
		[2]  
		www.david-morrison.org.uk/other-documents/i&s-200309-iraq-wmd.pdf
		
		[3]  
		www.david-morrison.org.uk/other-documents/i&s-200309-iraq-wmd.pdf
		
		[4]  www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2114502,00.html
		[5]  
		www.labour.org.uk/leadership/tony_blair_resigns
		[6]  
		www.mi5.gov.uk/output/Page23.html
		[7]  
		press.homeoffice.gov.uk/Speeches/speech-to-ippr
		www.david-morrison.org.uk
		
		david.morrison1@ntlworld.com 
		
      
      
      
      Fair Use
      Notice
      This site contains copyrighted material the
      use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright
      owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance
      understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic,
      democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this
      constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for
      in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.
      Section 107, the material on this site is
      distributed without profit to those
      who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information
      for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.
      If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of
      your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the
      copyright owner.