MI5 Boss Hits Back at Torture Claims in Unprecedented AttackAn orchestrated establishment attack was mounted yesterday on the judge who effectively accused MI5 of complicity in the torture of terror suspects overseas.
Not only did Home Secretary Alan Johnson hit out at the 'baseless, groundless' claims, but the head of MI5 itself took the highly unusual decision to defend his officers in public.
The pair were joined by the head of Westminster's Intelligence and Security Committee, who said he did not know what Master of the Rolls Lord Neuberger 'was playing at'.
War of words: Hon Mr Justice Neuberger's claims that MI5 knew British resident Binyam Mohamed was tortured by the CIA in Afghanistan were dismissed as 'baseless' by Alan Johnson
Lord Neuberger's judgment concluded that MI5 knew British resident Binyam Mohamed was tortured by the CIA in Afghanistan.
He accused the security agency of having a culture of disregarding human rights, and of misleading a parliamentary inquiry.
Jonathan Evans has strongly rejected claims there is a 'culture of suppression' within the MI5
Mr Johnson said yesterday: 'The security services in our country do not practise torture, they do not endorse torture, they don't encourage others to torture on our behalf, they don't collude in torture. Full stop. What we have to get back to is ensuring that our security services are treated fairly.
'People can make their arguments and their assertions but that shouldn't be taken by some commentators in the media as true simply because someone has said it's true.
'They're baseless, groundless, and there's no evidence to back them up.'
MI5 director-general Jonathan Evans, who very rarely comments in public, said Lord Neuberger's suggestion that there was a was a 'culture of suppression' within MI5 was 'the precise opposite of the truth'.
The claim appeared in a seven-paragraph section of the ruling that was withdrawn after intervention from Government lawyers, but which later leaked out.
Mr Evans said MI5 was simply seeking to protect the country from 'enemies who would use all the tools and their disposal - including propaganda - to attack'.Meanwhile ex-minister Kim Howells, who heads the Intelligence and Security Committee which has investigated the torture allegations, said: 'I don't know what the Master of the Rolls is doing or playing at.
'What I am telling you is that our completely independent investigations
don't seem to confirm that the agencies are involved in any way in torture or complicity in torture.'
The seven paragraphs of intelligence about Mohamed's treatment were published after judges rejected the Government's attempt to stop it on the grounds it would damage intelligence-sharing with the U.S.
The backlash to the judgment came on the same day as a letter was published by Mr Johnson and David Miliband saying it was
'disgraceful' to suggest that the UK aided or turned a blind eye to torture.They admit in the letter that operating guidance to British intelligence officers was altered at some point after 9/11 when it 'became clear' that the CIA had 'changed the rules of engagement'.
Mr Evans raised the same subject, saying he accepted that 'the British intelligence community was slow to detect the emerging pattern of U.S. mistreatment of detainees after September 11'.
But LibDem leader Nick Clegg said the comments in the letter 'raised far more questions than answers'.
Mr Clegg said: 'We must know who in Britain knew the U.S. had changed the rules on torture, when they knew and what action they took.
'We can only conclude that the security services either kept the information to themselves, or they informed ministers who failed to act immediately. Both of these would suggest at best a cover-up and at worst collusion in torture.
'Knowledge of Britain's potential complicity in torture looks likely to have gone to the very top of Government.'Yesterday human rights group Reprieve hit back at the 'absolutely extraordinary' criticism of Lord Neuberger, saying that judges were not 'rabble rousers'.
Executive director Clare Algar said: 'It has been made very clear that the intelligence services did know that Binyam was suffering cruel and unusual punishment and then he disappeared and the intelligence services continued to send questions to be asked of him in U.S. control wherever he might be.'
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