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India-Pakistan
MI5 tried to bug Pakistan mission: Report
2003-11-04
The foreign diplomatic mission where the United Kingdom’s security services tried to plant listening devices is believed to have belonged to Pakistan. The attempt was exposed by the Sunday Times newspaper, which quoted the codename of an English agent who was asked to facilitate access to the telephone system, visa room and cipher room of the high commission. Although the front-page report refused to name the mission, it dropped a number of clues, including a description of the naval attaché’s office on the top floor of the building and the visa office in the basement. The report has embarrassed the governments of Britain and Pakistan, which on paper at least are allies with the United States in the fight against terrorism. According to the paper the US embassy in London was also party to the operation.
A little glimmer that despite the encouraging words we throw their way, we don't trust them any further than we can throw them...
Such espionage has not been in evidence since the days of the Cold War, when electronic devices were attached to every nook and cranny of the embassies of the Soviet Union and its allies. The report said the task of facilitating the bugging operation was given to a former MI5 agent, codenamed Notation, who has since confessed his role in the operation to the high commission. "It is likely that the foreign office will now have the embarrassing task of explaining the espionage operation to its ally," the report said. It further claims that the MI5 took detailed plans and photographs of the mission before working out how to plant bugs in the telephone system and inside a closed-circuit television camera in the office of a diplomat. One officer is even alleged to have pretended to carry out a search for hazardous materials to gain access to secure areas. Meanwhile, agent Notation received tens of thousands of pounds as cash payment from MI5.
Doesn't sound like they got their money's worth...
He was, according to the Sunday Times, also told by his handler that the entire operation had been authorised at the highest level with warrants being signed by Home secretary David Blunkett.
Posted by:Paul Moloney

#5  bulldog, Hanson had solid right wing credentials. Youve got to vet EVERYBODY. I wont say Cambridge was a one-off, but OTOH having people with leftie background was probably useful for a lot of Cold War ops. Certainly we used social dem types and trade unionists and others to infiltrate the labor movement on the continent, to set up alternate unions, papers, etc. Youve got to set that against the damage done by the Cambridge spies, who (BTW) were NOT of working class background.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-11-4 2:06:18 PM  

#4  Whatever happened to the D-Notice? Isn't the UK government allowed to shut down newspapers that report on secret material? A week-long closure should have the necessary deterrent effect.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2003-11-4 10:03:50 AM  

#3  That should read right-of-centre political affiliation. And I'm only half joking.
Posted by: Bulldog   2003-11-4 6:54:12 AM  

#2  Britain's intelligence services have a loooonnnnng history of compromises and betrayals caused by lefties. Lefties recruited straight from elite universities, having bypassed the real world. IMO a requirement for access to anything remotely sensitive should be political affiliation. The left is not a friend of the west.
Posted by: Bulldog   2003-11-4 6:52:39 AM  

#1  I guess we aren't the only country with left-wing idiots in the Intel business.
Posted by: Charles   2003-11-4 4:46:08 AM  

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