http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23382705-details/MI5+warns+on+home-grown+terror/article.do

MI5 warns on home-grown terror
23.01.07

Britain is no safer today than it was on the day of the 7/7 bombings 
because of the upsurge in home-grown terrorism triggered by the Iraq and 
Afghan wars, intelligence chiefs have warned.

Despite the enormous extra resources that have been poured into the war 
on terror, they fear the relentless increase in threats to the UK have 
left MI5 overstretched.

"Society isn't safer today," a senior source claimed. "We are containing 
the threat but we are not gaining on it."

The revelation that MI5 believes the invasion of Iraq is behind the 
terror threat is an embarrassing blow to Tony Blair.

He has steadfastly refused to accept that his foreign policy has 
inspired attempts at home and abroad to attack the UK.

Military chiefs, senior civil servants and most ministers now believe 
that the Prime Minister's decision to back George Bush and go to war has 
radicalised young Muslims and encouraged terrorism.

But one intelligence source said: "The 2003 invasion triggered it all, 
but that's a reality we can't say in public."

Whitehall sources say that despite the secretive agency's best efforts, 
the volume of terror plots being monitored has stretched its resources 
to the limits.

The Security Service's leadership believes the increase has been fuelled 
by Britain's involvement in the war in Iraq.

There is also evidence that young Britons of Afghan origin are becoming 
radicalised as a result of Britain's high-profile involvement in the 
fight against the Taliban.

Late last year, MI5 chief Dame Eliza Manningham- Buller said her 3,000 
agents were tracking 200 plots involving 1,600 young British muslims, 
including 30 Priority 1' conspiracies to cause mass murder.

MI5 is expected to reach 3,800 staff by next year, but is still having 
to make daily decisions about which information to prioritise.

Experts say the level of resources needed to keep every potential 
suspect under surveillance would amount to creating a Soviet-style 
police state. Dame Eliza subsequently surprised MPs by announcing that 
she will stand down in April after 33 years with the service and four 
years in charge, sparking claims that she jumped before she was pushed.

Her friends say she had told the then Home Secretary Charles Clarke of 
her decision to quit in 2005, before the July bombings.

But some officials claim she was growing increasingly frustrated by the 
"demands of Labour politicians" and wanted to get out before what is 
expected to be a painful time for the service. The Daily Mail has been 
told that MI5 fears being used as a "political football" by ministers 
following her resignation.

The Secret Intelligence Service -- MI6 -- suffered a devastating blow to 
its reputation over claims that it allowed Downing Street to exaggerate 
the threat posed by Saddam Hussein in the so-called "dodgy dossier".

The admission that MI5 is finding it a challenge to keep up with the 
spread of Islamic extremists comes ahead of what are likely to be 
searching questions about its performance in coming weeks.

The counter-terrorism budget has soared to £2billion and MI5 has seen 
its staff nearly double since the attacks on America in September 2001.

The Security Service is bracing itself for a barrage of criticism when 
details of how much it knew about the July 7 bombers comes to light. It 
has launched a damage limitation exercise in an attempt to give its 
version of the events that led to the attacks.

MI5 had the ringleaders of the attacks that killed 52 people in London 
in 2005 under surveillance 18 months before, but did not discover their 
significance until it was too late.

Critics say it should have reacted better to evidence that Mohammed 
Siddique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer posed a threat.

But MI5 insists they were clean skins' -- not known suspects -- and not 
enough was known about them to justify using limited resources to keep 
them under constant surveillance.

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