Growing MI5 Spy Scandal: Margaret Thatcher’s Private Scolding of David Owen

Growing MI5 Spy Scandal: Margaret Thatcher’s Private Scolding of David Owen

A confidential​ exchange⁢ of ‍letters, released after 30 years of government secrecy, ‍between former prime minister Margaret Thatcher and David Owen, then the leader of the the Social Democratic party (SDP), has shed new light ⁣on an enduring MI5 spy scandal.

The ‌real-life espionage drama, which began in⁤ 1983 with a mysterious⁣ Moscow ‍death and was followed by the arrest in Britain of a would-be MI5 mole, led to a full-scale ⁤internal investigation into the security service and fuelled an escalating diplomatic feud⁢ with the Kremlin.

The fallout, it‌ is​ now made clear in papers released this weekend by the ​National Archives, added to worsening relations⁤ with the Soviet bloc,⁤ which pulled out of the 1984 Olympics later that summer in Los Angeles.

It‌ also led to‍ the British ⁢expulsion of ​a ⁤top Soviet diplomat, Arkady Guk, who was already‌ known by the UK government to be ‍running foreign agents ‌in London.

Lord Owen, 85, Labour foreign secretary⁣ from 1977-79⁣ under James Callaghan, was publicly and⁢ privately scolded by Thatcher for revealing the identity of the new head of MI5, who had been brought in from outside the⁢ intelligence services to shake up procedures and improve accountability ⁣after⁣ a string of high-profile embarrassments.

Not only was this job secret, so was the existence⁣ of MI5 itself at the time.

Owen, who co-founded the SDP, was speaking in the House of ‌Commons on 9 May 1985,⁤ just after Thatcher presented the critical findings of a security commission report into the handling of errant MI5 officer Michael Bettaney, who had been imprisoned for ⁢handing sensitive documents over to the Soviet ⁢Union.

The then leader of the opposition,‍ Neil Kinnock, responded ​to the ‌prime minister first, ‍with a scathing criticism of poor management inside the ⁤security service. Then, against longstanding convention, Owen took to his feet in the chamber and named Sir ⁢Antony Duff, ​newly installed at⁤ the top of MI5, arguing that his appointment⁣ alone would not be enough to reassure the public ‍about the ⁣security services.

Owen, then the ⁢MP for Plymouth Devonport, said the “professional and operational efficiency of the secret services surely must come into question”, adding: “Although Sir Antony Duff ‍is a ‍very distinguished public servant,⁣ will the prime minister give careful consideration‌ to the ​proposal for a complaints ombudsman covering both the security and​ intelligence services?”

The prime minister immediately called​ out Owen for this apparent slip, saying: “We⁤ should continue ⁢to enable the secret​ services to ​run in a secret way. After all, those against whom they ‌operate always have the benefit of secrecy.”

But we now know she went on to ‌tell him​ off in a ⁢“strictly confidential” letter: “I was surprised and disappointed,” she wrote, adding that she ​feared such behaviour “encourages others ‍to ignore the rules”.

He apologised: “I was obviously in error and ​hope you will convey‌ to Tony Duff my regrets.”

Further papers show the extent of ⁤the…

2023-12-31 04:00:02
Source from www.theguardian.com
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