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UK spy chiefs emerge from shadows to blast Edward Snowden

Andrew Parker the head of M15, John Sawers the head of M16 and Iain Lobban GCHQ director (L-R) are seen attending an Intelligence and Security Committee hearing at Parliament, in this still image taken from video in London November 7, 2013. REUTERS/UK Parliament via REUTERS TV

(Reuters) – Britain’s intelligence chiefs used their first ever joint public appearance to complain that documents leaked by former U.S. intelligence operative Edward Snowden had put secret operations at risk and were being “lapped up” by al Qaeda.

Andrew Parker the head of M15, John Sawers the head of M16 and Iain Lobban GCHQ director (L-R) are seen attending an Intelligence and Security Committee hearing at Parliament, in this still image taken from video in London November 7, 2013. REUTERS/UK Parliament via REUTERS TV

In an unprecedented evidence session before parliamentarians that local media likened to a scene from a James Bond film, the heads of Britain’s three main intelligence agencies said Snowden’s disclosures about mass surveillance had prompted them to consider being more open about what they do.

But they said parts of their work had to remain secret for national security reasons and that the data leaks, which detailed Britain’s close cooperation with the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), had caused huge damage.

“They’ve put our operations at risk,” John Sawers, the head of MI6, Britain’s foreign intelligence service, told a parliamentary committee.

“It’s clear that our adversaries are rubbing their hands with glee, al Qaeda is lapping it up.”

The robust nature of his comments underlined how angry intelligence chiefs are about Snowden and what they believe is the irresponsible way some newspapers published his information despite warnings not to do so.

Civil liberties groups, parts of the media and lawmakers from all parties have argued that Snowden’s disclosures about the scale of government monitoring shows it needs to be reined in and security agencies put under greater oversight.

Iain Lobban, the director of GCHQ, Britain’s electronic eavesdropping agency, told lawmakers that intelligence chiefs were “actively considering” whether more information should now be shared with the public.

But he argued that certain methods should remain secret, citing what he said were specific examples where the Snowden data leaks had harmed national security.

“We have actually seen chat around specific terrorist groups who, even close to home, discuss how to avoid what they now perceive to be vulnerable communications methods, or how to select communications which they now perceive not to be exploitable,” he said.

Defending the use of electronic surveillance, he said GCHQ did not spend its time listening to the phone calls or reading the emails of most Britons, saying it would be illegal to do so and that it only acted in very specific cases.

VEIL OF SECRECY FALLS

The fact that the three intelligence chiefs even appeared in public – the head of MI5, Britain’s domestic security service, was also present – was a first in Britain.

In the past, such hearings have been behind closed doors and it was not until 1992 that the name of the head of MI6, formally known as the Secret Intelligence Service, was publicly known.

Sawers, the current head of MI6, wore a green tie, a nod to a quirky tradition which means that the person doing his job writes in green ink and is known internally as “C”.

The hearing, which lasted about 90 minutes, was televised, albeit with a short delay for security reasons.

It also looked at wider security threats.

Andrew Parker, the head of MI5, told lawmakers there were “several thousand” people in Britain who supported or were engaged in violent extremism, saying that some were interested in committing “spectaculars” – a term for attacks causing mass casualties.

Britain had thwarted over 34 terrorist attacks since 2005, he added, saying that the vast majority of those plots were planned by British residents.

Lawmakers heard that the number of Britons travelling to fight in Syria was in “the low hundreds” and about al Qaeda’s growth in north, west and east Africa and in Yemen and Syria.

“We have seen a threat from all of those areas but also still from south Asia,” said Parker.

Closer to home, he said there were only a small number of people he regarded as terrorists in Northern Ireland, saying they were from a “bygone era”.

“These people will, eventually over time, give up or be caught and put before the courts and put in jail,” he said.

(Additional reporting by William James and Joshua Franklin; Editing by Matthew Tostevin)

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