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First female chief to take reins of secret service MI6

First female chief to take reins of secret service MI6

Yahoo8 hours ago

The first ever female head of MI6 has been announced by Sir Keir Starmer to lead Britain's secret service in the face of an 'unprecedented scale' of threats faced by the UK.
Blaise Metreweli, a career intelligence officer who currently serves as director of technology at the organisation, will become the 18th chief in the organisation's 116-year history.
She will take over from Sir Richard Moore, a senior civil servant who will step down in the autumn after five years in the role.
Commonly referred to as C, the chief has operational responsibility for MI6, and is the only publicly named member of the organisation.
Despite Dame Judi Dench playing M, the fictional head of the secret service in the James Bond films, there has never been a woman in charge of the organisation in real life.
Earlier this year, Sir Richard, who was the first member of MI6 to openly use X, formerly Twitter, suggested a female candidate could replace him.
'We have yet to have a woman as chief so there's still a glass ceiling to shatter. #AccelerateAction,' he wrote in a post on the social media site.
Ms Metreweli first joined the service as a case officer in 1999 and has carried out operational roles in the Middle East and Europe.
In her new post, she will be accountable to the Foreign Secretary.
The Prime Minister said: 'The historic appointment of Blaise Metreweli comes at a time when the work of our intelligence services has never been more vital.
'The United Kingdom is facing threats on an unprecedented scale, be it aggressors who send their spy ships to our waters or hackers whose sophisticated cyber plots seek to disrupt our public services.
'I'd like to thank Sir Richard Moore for his dedicated service, and I know Blaise will continue to provide the excellent leadership needed to defend our county and keep our people safe – the foundation of my Plan for Change.'
Foreign Secretary David Lammy said: 'I am delighted to appoint Blaise Metreweli as the next chief of MI6.
'With a wealth of experience from across our national security community, Blaise is the ideal candidate to lead MI6 into the future.
'At a time of global instability and emerging security threats, where technology is power and our adversaries are working ever closer together, Blaise will ensure the UK can tackle these challenges head on to keep Britain safe and secure at home and abroad.
'Every day, our intelligence services work behind the scenes to protect our national security and compete with our adversaries.
'That's why I am proud that we are investing an extra £600 million in our intelligence community so they can continue to defend our way of life.
'I would also like to pay tribute to Sir Richard Moore for his service and leadership.
'I have worked closely with him over the past year and thank him for his valuable contribution enhancing our national security and protecting the British public.'
Ms Metreweli said: 'I am proud and honoured to be asked to lead my service.
'MI6 plays a vital role, with MI5 and GCHQ, in keeping the British people safe and promoting UK interests overseas.
'I look forward to continuing that work alongside the brave officers and agents of MI6 and our many international partners.'
Outgoing chief Sir Richard said: 'I am absolutely delighted by this historic appointment of my colleague, Blaise Metreweli to succeed me as 'C'.
'Blaise is a highly accomplished intelligence officer and leader, and one of our foremost thinkers on technology.
'I am excited to welcome her as the first female head of MI6.'

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Residents gather updates from foreign news agencies and Iranian satellite channels, one individual told The Telegraph. They said: 'Naturally everyone is shocked and stressed, but no-one seems to be able to publicly protest as each one of us is trying to survive the minute and see what happens next. 'But people are united in their cursing of the regime for this unwanted war and its victims and most blame Khamenei for his sheer madness that has brought so much misery to the people and the country,' they added. Donald Trump has said it is 'possible' the US will become involved in the Iran-Israel conflict. The Republican president told ABC News that talks about Iran's nuclear programme were continuing and that Tehran would 'like to make a deal', perhaps now more quickly amid the Israeli missile bombardment. 'It's possible we could get involved' Mr Trump said in an off-camera interview with ABC News. The president made the comments while stressing that the US is 'not at this moment involved' and adding that he was open to Vladimir Putin acting as a mediator in the conflict. Mr Trump said of the Russian president's potential involvement: 'He is ready. He called me about it. We had a long talk about it.' Multiple car bombs have reportedly detonated in Tehran, according to reports from Iran's IRNA news agency. Accounts circulating on social media claim five bombs detonated simultaneously near government buildings. Unverified footage of the alleged incident shows thick, black smoke rising from a flaming car and the windows blown out of surrounding buildings. An eyewitness on the ground in Tehran has described the situation as 'absolutely dire and terrifying'. The individual, who works in a government office, told The Telegraph that certain areas of the city close to military garrisons resemble 'ghost towns' amid Benjamin Netanyahu's renewed offensive on the capital. They said: 'People are boarding up their windows and stocking food in preparation to stay indoors for many more days to come. 'Those Tehranis who could get enough petrol after waiting at gas stations for four hours have packed up and made it to the northern cities of the province of Mazandaran and its seaside towns.' They said the main Chalus road connecting Tehran to the Caspian Sea coast was 'bumper to bumper' as residents attempted to flee the capital and the escape the worst of the missile barrage. Iran has launched a new missile strike against Israel, the IDF warned. The Israeli army told citizens to take shelter inside bunkers after it detected an incoming attack. The missile launch was confirmed by Iranian state TV. It is the first daylight rocket barrage fired since the start of the fighting on Friday. A short while later, the IDF Home Front Command told civilians they no longer needed to remain inside bomb shelters. 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Benjamin Netanyahu said that Iran 'will pay a very heavy price for premeditated murder of civilians, women and children' as he visited the site of a missile strike on a residential building in Bat Yam. 'We will achieve our objectives, and we will strike them with overwhelming force,' Israel's prime minister added. Six people were killed in Bat Yam after an overnight strike hit an eight-storey building, including an eight-year-old girl and a 10-year-old boy. Most of the people killed or injured in Israeli strikes on Iran were civilians, according to Mohammad-Reza Zafarghandi, Iran's health minister. Speaking on state media, Mr Zafarghandi also claimed that the majority of the civilians killed were women and children. Iranian authorities have not provided an updated death toll as of today, but said that 78 people had been killed and 320 wounded after the first wave of Israeli strikes on Friday Israel has claimed that more than 170 targets have been attacked in Iran and issued evacuation orders for residents near Iranian military facilities. Commuters witnessed a plume of smoke rising from an oil refinery in southern Tehran that was hit by an overnight Israeli strike. Israel's El Al Airlines has cancelled flights to and from a number of European cities, as well as Tokyo and Moscow, reports Reuters. The airline said on Sunday that all flights have been cancelled up to and including June 17, as Israel's airspace remains closed for a third consecutive day. 'Once approvals are received from the relevant security and aviation authorities, we will do everything possible to allow as many Israelis as possible to return home, gradually resume our regular flight schedule and operate rescue flights from destinations near Israel,' El Al said. Israeli media reports that tens of thousands of Israelis may be stranded abroad. The Israel Airport Authority has warned passengers that they can expect to wait for 'days' until a return flight will be possible The authority added that 'even when the security establishment allows the resumption of flights, the rate of flights will be limited to minimise risks and maintain the safety of passengers and aircrafts.' Fresh blasts have been heard in the Iranian capital as Israeli attacks continue for a third day, according to the AFP news agency. An Iranian government spokesperson told state TV that Iranians can seek shelter in metro stations, schools and mosques as of today, as the country hunkers down for more strikes. On Sunday, Iranian media said that attacks from Israel had targeted Tehran's defence ministry headquarters and a facility affiliated with the ministry in Isfahan, central Iran. Israel has claimed that it hit over 80 targets in Tehran overnight. The total death toll is still unclear after the latest Iranian strike hit an apartment block in the coastal town of Bat Yam, a suburb of Tel Aviv. The missile weighing hundreds of kilos hit directly into the residential building which collapsed internally, taking many of the residents with Telegraph spoke to one man waiting for his brother inside the building as search teams battle through the could barely speak and did not want to be interviewed but his friend, who asked not to be named to respect the family, said the man in his 40s, a father of two, fell from the 2nd floor Israeli military says three are under the rubble and four more are missing, with search and rescue teams working to find the missing before the rest of the building Shaked, a local resident, told The Telegraph: 'This is unreal to see, not just painful but hard to comprehend.'Displaced residents were brought to a local school in Bat Yam and given food and drink while they waited for news of their temporary accommodation. Iran's Revolutionary Guard has released a list of seven more top aerospace commanders it says were killed by Israeli strikes early on Friday. 'We mourn the deaths of seven of our commanders,' the force said in a statement. On Saturday, the IDF said that its strikes had killed more than 20 Iranian commanders. The streets of Bat Yam in central Israel were strewn with dust and glass after the worst night of Iranian bombing since Kehasi, 39, was in his home between blasts when he was injured by shattering glass. His home is just 300m from the building worst hit in the strike, which has damaged 61 buildings within eight to nine streets, according to rescue teams.'All the windows broke in our apartment,' he told the Telegraph on Sunday morning at the site where crowds anxiously waited for news of the seven or eight more people missing inside the wrecked building.'The glass flew in my eyes, my skin, I had to go to hospital to have shards removed from my eye,' he said, with stitches in his shoulder and father of two who works as a decorator said: 'It was extremely scary but we know there is still more to come. It's not over yet. But I was very lucky.' The UK has warned against all travel to Israel amid the escalating conflict with Iran. The Foreign Office has placed Israel on 'red' alert - the same level as Iran - as airspace over both countries remains closed. On Friday, the Foreign Office updated advice to warn against 'all but essential travel' to much of Israel. Areas around Gaza, the West Bank and the Golan Heights were already red zones - as shown in the map below. Iran's Shahran oil depot in Tehran is still in operation after it was targeted by Israel in an overnight attack, said Iran's oil ministry. The oil depot was seen being engulfed by flames after the strike. The ministry said that fuel production and distribution continued after the strike caused a huge fire to break out. Per Reuters, Iran's oil ministry said that 'the fuel volume in the targeted tank was not high, and the situation is fully under control'. Credit: Reuters Early on Sunday morning, flames were pictured rising from an oil storage facility struck by an Israeli missile in Iran's capital, Tehran. Iran says it has arrested two individuals accused of being members of Israel's intelligence agency Mossad, according to Reuters, which cites the semi-official Iranian Tasnim news agency. Iran claims that the two suspects were detained in Alborz province while they were preparing explosives and electronic devices. Iranian authorities were also reported to have arrested five individuals in the central city of Yazd on Saturday on suspicion of spying for Israel and collaborating with its intelligence services. Strikes on one of Iran's key nuclear facilities on June 12 and June 13 are said to have inflicted 'extremely effective' but not yet 'fatal' damage, according to new analysis from the Institute for the Study of War. The report from Saturday night cites US and senior Israeli officials and refers to the Natanz Nuclear Facility, Iran's primary enrichment facility. Natanz is where Iran has produced a vast majority of its nuclear fuel. Much of it is underground and as such not vulnerable to attacks. Satellite images analysed by the Institute show damage to buildings in the north-west and north-east corners of the facility. Two US officials told CNN on Saturday that electrical infrastructure was destroyed by strikes at Natanz, and that electricity was knocked out on the lower levels where the centrifuges used to enrich uranium are stored. A senior Israeli official has claimed that the strikes inflicted significant damage to the air defence systems at Natanz as well as the site itself. Pipelines and transmission lines between facilities in the Bazan oil refinery complex in the northern Israeli city of Haifa were damaged during last night's missile attack from Iran. Refining activities continue, but some downstream operations have been shut down, the company reported to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. Haifa was the target of a barrage of Iranian missiles on Saturday evening. The northern coastal city is home to a major naval base, oil refineries and numerous chemical plants, and has as such been treated as a strategic target by Iran. There were no injuries or casualties as a result of the attack on the Bazan oil refinery. Credit: X/@Charles_Lister Rachel Reeves has said that the UK could 'potentially' support Israel in its conflict with Iran. Talking to Sky News, the Chancellor said: 'I'm not going to rule anything out at this stage... it's a fast moving situation, a very volatile situation.' She emphasised that the UK has so far not been involved, but said: 'We're sending in assets to both protect ourselves and also potentially to support our allies.' Tzipi Hotovely, Israel's ambassador to the UK, said that Benjamin Netanyahu is not looking for 'regime change' in Iran and insisted that Israeli attacks on Iran would bring about peace in Gaza. Speaking to the BBC, Ms Hotovely said the purpose of Israeli attacks on Tehran was to 'destroy the ballistic missiles programme' and prevent Iranian support for Islamist groups in Gaza, Yemen and Lebanon. 'Our Prime Minister was very clear: we were not aiming for regime change,' she said. 'This is not the aim of this military operation. We are clear about harming and damaging in a way that will create a total rollback to Iran's nuclear program. This is our aim, and we are also aiming to destroy the ballistic missiles programme.' She added: 'I believe that it gives better opportunity to get a ceasefire in Gaza, because once the patron of Hamas…this vicious plan to invade Israel and to barbarically kill our people, through Hezbollah, through the Houthis and through Hamas…this will stop once Iran won't have the capabilities and ability to sponsor terrorism all around the world and around Israel.' Iran's attacks on Israel will end when it ends its military 'aggression', said Abbas Araghchi, Iran's foreign minister, in a broadcast on state TV. 'We are defending ourselves; our defence is entirely legitimate,' Mr Araghchi claimed. 'If the aggression stops, naturally our responses will stop.' The foreign minister also said on Sunday that Israel has 'crossed a new red line' by targeting Iran's nuclear sites and called strikes on the offshore South Pars gas field Iran shares with Qatar 'a blatant aggression and a very dangerous act'. 'Dragging the conflict to the Persian Gulf is a strategic mistake, and its aim is to drag the war beyond Iranian territory,' he added. Donald Trump said the US had 'nothing to do' with the attack on Iran overnight. In a post on his Truth Social platform, the US president wrote: 'If we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the U.S. Armed Forces will come down on you at levels never seen before.' Mr Trump reiterated his desire to strike a deal, writing 'we can easily get a deal done between Iran and Israel, and end this bloody conflict!!!' Israeli first responders conducted search and rescue missions overnight at the sites of missile strikes in central Israel. In a broadcast on state TV, Abbas Araghchi, Iran's foreign minister, said that Iran has 'solid proof' that US forces supported Israel in its attacks, according to AFP. The foreign minister added that Iran does not want the conflict with Israel to expand, but that Tehran will defend itself if forced to. Mr Araghchi said that the US needs to condemn Israel's strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, claiming that Israel is trying to sabotage talks between Iran and the US, which he says could have led to an agreement. The Israeli military has issued an evacuation warning to Iranian civilians residing near military facilities after a wave of Israeli strikes on military targets. 'For your safety, we ask that you evacuate immediately and refrain from returning until further notice. Proximity to these facilities puts your life at risk,' Avichay Adraee, a spokesperson for the IDF, wrote on X. The warning includes all military weapons production factories and their support institutions. Mr Adraee has in the past signaled other strikes in Gaza, Lebanon and Yemen. On Saturday, Benjamin Netanyahu warned Iranians in a video address that Israel will 'strike every site and every target of the Ayatollah's regime'.

UK appoints Blaise Metreweli first woman head of MI6 spy service
UK appoints Blaise Metreweli first woman head of MI6 spy service

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

UK appoints Blaise Metreweli first woman head of MI6 spy service

The UK government has appointed Blaise Metreweli as the first-ever woman to head its MI6 spy service as the country faces "threats on an unprecedented scale", Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced on Sunday. The MI6 Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) achieved global fame through Ian Fleming's fictional agent James Bond. Metreweli will be the 18th head of the service, Starmer's Downing Street office said in a statement. "The historic appointment of Blaise Metreweli comes at a time when the work of our intelligence services has never been more vital," Starmer said. "The United Kingdom is facing threats on an unprecedented scale -- be it aggressors who send their spy ships to our waters or hackers whose sophisticated cyber plots seek to disrupt our public services," he added. The MI6 chief is the only publicly named member of the organisation and reports directly to the foreign minister. The person in the post is referred to as "C" -- not "M" as in the James Bond franchise, which already had a woman, played by Judi Dench, in the role. Metreweli will take over from outgoing MI6 head Richard Moore in the autumn. Currently, she is MI6's director general -- known as "Q" -- with responsiblity for technology and innovation at the service, the statement said. She is described as a career intelligence officer who joined the service in 1999 having studied anthropology at Cambridge University. Metreweli held senior roles at both MI6 and the MI5 domestic intelligence service and spent most of her career in "operational roles in the Middle East and Europe", the statement added, without giving further biographical details. The appointment comes over three decades after MI5 appointed its first female chief. Stella Rimington held the position from 1992-1996, followed by Eliza Manningham-Buller from 2002-2007. The UK intelligence and security organisation GCHQ appointed its first woman chief, Anne Keast-Butler, in 2023. har/rmb/rlp

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