- 26 updates
Snowden leaks 'operations risk'
MI6 chief Sir John Sawers said the leaks from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden "have been damaging and put operations at risk." The heads of Britain's intelligence agencies were questioned by MPs in public for the first time.
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Spy chief: Working at MI6 'not like James Bond'
Working at MI6 is not like James Bond, one of the security chiefs told MPs that operatives are given far more supervision.
"The idea of sending an agent off into the field like James Bond, then he comes back two months later and reports... that doesn't work that way," Sir John Sawers, chief of MI6, said. "Our people in the field will have constant communication with us."
Rifkind: Spy chiefs glad to explain their work
Sir Malcolm Rifkind has said that security chiefs speaking to MPs in public today was "an historic occasion" that will be repeated.
The Chair of the Intelligence and Security Committee added that he believed those involved were glad of the chance to speak publicly.
He said: "Many of them have been upset at the accusations that they have been doing something improper or doing something unreasonable to their fellow citizens.
"I suspect they were pleased to have the opportunity in public to speak about the work their own staff do and how important it is to the national interest."
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- ITV Report
UK enemies 'rubbing their hands with glee' over leaks
Spy chiefs believe Snowden leaks caused damage
MI6 chief: Snowden leaks 'put operations at risk'
MI6 chief Sir John Sawers said the leaks from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden "have been damaging and put operations at risk."
Al-Qaeda is "lapping up" the leaks and Britain's enemies are rubbing their hands with glee, the British intelligence chief added.
I guarantee GCHQ is subject to the law, chief promises
Asked if GCHQ could guarantee it does not operate beyond UK law, Sir Iain Lobban replied: "I can give you that guarantee. I believe that to be true. We are subject to the law."
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GCHQ boss: Secret does not mean sinister
Some work that GCHQ carries our is "necessarily secret," Sir Iain Lobban said.
"I don't think secret means unaccountable in any sense."
"I don't think secret means sinister," he added.
'We don't spend time listening to phone calls of majority'
"We do not spend our time listening to the telephone calls or reading the emails of the majority," GCHQ boss Sir Iain Lobban told the committee.
GCHQ boss lists 'hacktivists' among cyber threats
GCHQ boss Sir Iain Lobban listed current key cyber threats: industrial espionage, terrorists, hacktivists, highly-sophisticated criminal actors, non-state actors, and "engagement by some states as an over-the-horizon means of disruption."
MI5 'disrupted 34 terrorist plots' since 7/7 bombings
MI5 has disrupted 34 terrorist plots "at all sizes and stages" since the 7/7 bombings in London in 2005, Andrew Parker told the committee.
"The vast majority come from people who live here."
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UK enemies 'rubbing their hands with glee' over leaks
Britain's enemies are "rubbing their hands with glee" over whistleblower Edward Snowden's NSA leaks, the MI6 chief said.