Statement on reviews into the attacks in Manchester and London
The Home Secretary has made a statement following the publication of David Anderson QC’s report on the internal reviews conducted by MI5 and counter-terrorism policing.
Mr Speaker, I would like to make a statement on David Anderson’s report published today on recent terrorist attacks in London and Manchester.
The attacks which took place this year shocked us all. Our thoughts remain with the victims of the attacks and all those affected by them. I am conscious that many will still be suffering acutely.
However painful, it is essential that we examine what happened so that we can maximise the chances of preventing further attacks in the future.
The wider context
At the outset, I would like to remind Honourable Members of the context. Andrew Parker, the Director General of MI5 recently said that we are facing ‘a dramatic upshift’ in terrorist threats.
And as the so-called caliphate in Syria and Iraq has weakened, Daesh has increasingly turned its attention to encouraging people to launch attacks in their home countries.
Indeed, there is simply more terrorist activity, partly inspired and also enabled by terrorist propaganda and instructional videos online.
Plots are developing more quickly from radicalisation to attack.
And threats are becoming harder to detect, partly due to the challenge of accessing communications that are increasingly end-to-end encrypted.
MI5 and Counter-Terrorism Policing are currently running well over 500 live operations – a third up since the beginning of the year – involving roughly 3,000 ‘subjects of interest’. In addition, there are over 20,000 further individuals – or closed subjects of interest – who have previously been investigated, and may again pose a threat.
So I would like to pay tribute to MI5 and the police, who work tirelessly to keep us safe. I can announce today that they have now disrupted 22 Islamist terrorist plots since the murder of Lee Rigby in May 2013, including 9 since the Westminster attack in March this year.
The reviews
Mr Speaker, I now turn to the reviews. Counter-Terrorism Policing and MI5 have conducted a thorough review process. I received from them ten highly classified documents, which analyse the attacks and potential improvements to operational practices.
In June, I commissioned David Anderson QC to provide independent assurance of, and external challenge to, the reviews. I am today placing a copy of his unclassified assessment of the reviews in the house library and copies will also be made available in the Vote Office.
David Anderson concludes that the reviews have been carried out in an ‘impressively thorough and fair’ manner, and he endorses – so far as he feels qualified to do so – the conclusions and recommendations.
Based on the MI5 and police reviews, David Anderson explains that:
In the case of the Westminster attack, Khalid Masood was a closed subject of interest at the time of the attack. Neither MI5 nor the police had any reason to anticipate the attack.
Regarding the Manchester Arena attack, Salman Abedi was also a closed subject of interest at the time of the attack, and so not under active investigation. In early 2017, MI5 nonetheless received intelligence on him, which was assessed as not being related to terrorism. In retrospect the intelligence can be seen to be highly relevant. Had an investigation been re-opened at the time, it cannot be known whether Abedi’s plans could have been stopped: MI5 assess that it would have been unlikely.
Across the attacks, including Manchester Arena, David Anderson notes that MI5 and CT Policing got a great deal right. However, in relation to Manchester, he also commented that ‘it is conceivable that the attack… might have been averted had the cards fallen differently’. In the case of London Bridge, Khuram Butt was an active subject of interest who had been under investigation since mid-2015. A number of different investigative means were deployed against him, but they did not reveal his plans. His two conspirators had never been investigated by MI5 or CT Policing.
In regards to Finsbury Park, neither MI5 nor the police had any intelligence about this attack.
Taken as a whole, MI5 and CT Policing conclude they could not ‘find any key moments where different decisions would have made it likely that they could have stopped any of the attacks’. Nonetheless, they go on to make a total of 126 recommendations.
Recommendations
The recommendations made in the MI5 and police operational review fall into four broad categories:
First, there needs to be a concerted effort to enhance MI5 and the police’s ability to use data to detect activity of concern, and to test new approaches in the acquisition, sharing and analysis of data.
Second, MI5 should share its intelligence more widely, and work with partners such as local authorities on how best to manage the risk posed by closed subjects of interest in particular. We are considering undertaking multi-agency pilots in a number of areas including Greater Manchester, and I have already started discussing how to take this forward with Andy Burnham.
Third, there should be a new approach to managing domestic extremism, particularly extreme right wing groups, where their activity meets the definition of terrorism. Fourth, there are a large number of detailed and technical changes which could be made to improve existing operational counter-terrorism processes.
Strategic themes
David Anderson ends his report with several reflections.
First, that intelligence is imperfect, and investigators are making tough judgments based on incomplete information.
This unfortunately means that not every attack can be stopped. As we do not live in a surveillance state, it will always be a challenge to law enforcement to stop determined attackers getting through.
Despite this, we should remember that most attacks continue to be successfully disrupted. Lastly, David Anderson concludes that even marginal improvements are capable of paying dividends that could tip the balance in favour of the security forces in future cases.
Mr Speaker, I have discussed these reviews at length with David Anderson, and separately with Andrew Parker and the Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick as well as their senior teams. I am grateful for all their work and am confident that they have asked the right questions and drawn the right conclusions. I am clear, as are they, that the implementation of the recommendations is crucial.
Mr Speaker, there will be those who seek to apportion blame for the attacks. We should be united in our clarity that it lies squarely with those whose cowardly acts killed 36 innocent people this year, and those who encouraged them. At the same time, we must learn all that we can from these attacks, and make sure our overall counter-terrorism response is equal to the shift we have seen in the threat.
Next steps
Mr Speaker, I want to turn briefly now to the next steps.
Bringing those responsible to justice is our priority. We must not do anything that jeopardises criminal prosecutions, which are being pursued in relation to Manchester and Finsbury Park.
The coroners’ investigations will probe the matter further and independently assess the circumstances of the deaths.
Inquests have already been opened into the attacks, and suspended where criminal investigations are continuing. It is right that those inquests proceed wherever they can. If the coroners consider they cannot fully deal with the relevant issues, then that is the point to decide whether an inquiry is needed and we are ruling nothing out.
I welcome the Intelligence and Security Committee’s intention to make these attacks its top priority, and I have already discussed this with my Rt Hon Friend the Member for Beaconsfield.
As I have already outlined, implementation of the recommendations will be crucial. I have asked David Anderson to provide an independent stock-take of that progress in a year’s time.
But linked to implementation are resources. We will shortly be announcing the budgets for policing for 2018/19 and I am clear that we must ensure Counter Terrorism Policing has the resources needed to deal with the threats that we face.
Finally, these recommendations need to fit into the broader Government review of our counter-terrorism strategy.
That review reaches well beyond MI5 and CT Policing to look at the whole of government response, and at how we can work better with communities, the private sector and international partners.
Conclusion
I would like to conclude by thanking David Anderson for his independent assurance of these reviews and I again pay tribute to the excellent work of the police and MI5.
Mr Speaker, I end as I started. The thoughts of everyone in this House and the Other Place are with the victims, their families and all those affected by the attacks.
I commend this statement to the House.