Страницы

Monday, June 27, 2016

Security implications

Understanding Brexit’s Security Implications

(L-R) Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, Prime Minister David Cameron and General Sir Chris Deverell are joined by other dignataries as they take the salute during the main military parade during the Armed Forces Day National Event on June 25, 2016 in Cleethorpes, England. The visit by the Prime Minister came the day after the country voted to leave the European Union. Armed Forces Day is an annual event that gives an opportunity for the country to show its support for the men and women in the British Armed Forces. The reality is that Britain’s close ties with foreign security services will be unaffected by Brexit in any serious or long-term way. In intelligence terms, the EU hardly matters at all. It has lots of liaison jobs, no end of meetings on intelligence sharing, plus endless retreats for spy agency higher-ups—but the hard work, day in and day out, of intelligence cooperation is still largely a bilateral matter. No matter what happens with Brexit, London’s secret ties with key partners in Paris, Berlin and beyond will continue, no matter what pundits and politicos say.
Above all the Special Relationship in intelligence among Britain, America and our Anglosphere partners will go forward, as it has for more than three-quarters of a century. It began in the bleak summer of 1940, just after the fall of France to Nazi Germany, when London stood virtually alone against Berlin. American intelligence offered its precious code-breaking secrets to Britain, and our new friends quickly began their sharing their closely guarded secrets too. Soon Canada, Australia and New Zealand joined in, and together the five Anglosphere countries forged an intelligence partnership to defeat Germany and Japan like the world had never seen.

No comments:

Post a Comment