Fraser Nelson reveals the mounting fury within the intelligence community at ministers’ failure to set in place a serious framework for smashing Islamic terrorism. Too little too late is the angry verdict of the spooks
On Wednesday morning, Mr Reid observed that such a message coming from a politician would not be heeded. ‘But coming from the director-general of MI5 it carries a great deal of weight.’ Not for the first time, the intelligence services are helping the Labour government make a political point. But it is precisely this steady politicisation of the intelligence agencies, which we saw during the Hutton inquiry three years ago, that is the problem for the spooks. Their overall strategy has been marinaded in the same political correctness which infects the rest of government policies. In Dame Eliza’s speech, as with the Queen’s Speech, it is possible to detect the passages inserted by a Labour spin-doctor. Is it really possible that the head of MI5, who spends her time tracking plots to wreak mass loss of life on the British public, thinks that climate change is a ‘worse problem’ than terrorism?
The betrayal of the real Bond would be difficult to depict on screen. It would have to be an incongruous mix of the American series 24 and Fawlty Towers: a chaotic leadership bumbling around making it almost impossible for highly skilled agents to catch the deadly enemy. It would have to show the terrorist enemy spending five years developing and multiplying while the nation’s hapless leaders desperately searched for a strategy. In the real Bond movie, our hero would be betrayed not by anyone in his agency, but by the more mundane reality of ministerial fecklessness.
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Nancy Dell’Olio makes an impassioned case for Keynesian economics as the necessary remedy for the global crisis. It is to the Cambridge economist that we should turn once more
Dylan Jones is astonished to find in Sofia that the former communist country has embraced his guide to the mores of modern life — and that not everybody looks like Borat
Matthew Castray looks back on the Australian Prime Minister’s first year in office and audits an administration which has reviewed much and done very little
Rod Liddle says that something has gone wrong when 15 South Lanarkshire social workers are sacked over a dodgy Gary Glitter joke while none of their counterparts in Haringey has even been reprimanded over the ‘Baby P’ case
Fraser Nelson says that the Pre-Budget Report killed off New Labour without landing a punch on the Tories. It has paved the way for a new Conservatism, in which Cameron woos aspirational voters, focuses on government debt and looks for responsible spending cuts
After a week of clamorous competition between the parties over tax cuts, Fraser Nelson offers a guide to paying for them: a programme of spending cuts that would preserve core services but shave off the fat of the Brown years. All that is needed is political will
Stand by for a mighty clash between two politicians, says Fraser Nelson. The now infamous dinner between Mandelson and Osborne was a cordial parting for power-brokers of different generations who will fight each other savagely for electoral advantage
Rod Liddle is outraged by the Foreign Secretary’s alleged comparison of himself to Michael Heseltine: like comparing a Big Beast to a stumpy little Muntjac deer. Where have all the political giants gone?
Fraser Nelson says that the Tory leader must not be tempted by a ‘safety first’ strategy at his conference in Birmingham. The global financial crisis has transformed the political context and left an opening for the Conservatives to promise true radicalism and to be proudly bold
Andrew Tyrie says that root-and-branch reform of the Treasury will be needed when Brown is gone, including weekly minuted meetings. Past friendship is not enough
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