The new head of MI6 says his agency will monitor other countries’ climate commitments, but the UK’s intelligence agencies are refusing to provide any information on their own environmental footprint.
MARK CURTIS
Four terrorists who murdered Britons fought in David Cameron’s war in Libya
by MARK CURTIS | 25 May 2021
TAGGED: David Cameron, Libya, Manchester Bombing, MI5, MI6, Qatar
The public inquiry into the 2017 Manchester terrorist attack shows no sign of investigating the UK’s covert role in the Libya war of 2011 — in which the Manchester bomber had fought. He is one of four terrorists from that conflict who went on to slaughter 63 people, mainly Britons, in separate attacks — and they may even have received military training from UK-allied forces.
UK spends millions training security forces to control Palestinians in West Bank and Lebanon
by MARK CURTIS | 20 May 2021
TAGGED: Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine
British aid projects supporting Palestinian security forces appear to be as much about helping to stop threats to Israel, the occupying power, as they are about enhancing Palestinian state-building.
How the UK military supports Israel’s combat operations against Palestinians
by MARK CURTIS | 15 May 2021
TAGGED: Israel, Palestine
As violence escalates in Israel and Palestine, we take readers through the expanding military relationship between the UK and Israel, which has been erased by the British media. The deepening alliance involves UK military training of Israel for combat, joint exercises, arms deals, as well as intelligence cooperation.
Revealed: The UK’s largest intelligence agency is a significant emitter of greenhouse gases
by MARK CURTIS | 7 May 2021
TAGGED: GCHQ
Declassified UK obtains first evidence of the environmental footprint of Britain’s surveillance agency, GCHQ, which shows its staff are flying nearly three times more than the average Briton annually, raising questions about the scale of its global base network, which has never been officially acknowledged.
Like billionaire-controlled media, The Guardian misinforms its readers on the UK’s role in world
by MARK CURTIS | 26 April 2021
Millions of its readers believe The Guardian offers critical, independent reporting that is different to the right-wing, billionaire-controlled UK media. But its limited coverage of British foreign and security policies gives a misleading picture of what the UK does in the world. The paper is in reality a defender of Anglo-American power and a key ideological pillar of the British establishment.
While media focuses on Russian money, UK ministers allow Gulf tyrannies to invest £140bn in Britain
by MARK CURTIS | 9 April 2021
TAGGED: Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE
Five highly repressive Gulf states – Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates — have been able to invest at least £140bn in Britain. The figure is more than five times larger than Russian investments in the UK, which have, by contrast, received sustained criticism in the media and government.
The British ambassador who supported a coup
by MARK CURTIS | 30 March 2021
TAGGED: Bolivia
Britain’s ambassador to Bolivia, Jeff Glekin, played a personal role in events leading up to the 2019 military-backed coup that deposed the country’s democratically elected president, Evo Morales — and strongly supported the new regime as it carried out two massacres of unarmed protesters, Declassified has found.
Charles of Arabia: How Britain’s next king bolsters autocratic Gulf regimes
by MARK CURTIS | 24 February 2021
TAGGED: Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia
The heir to the British throne, Prince Charles, has held 95 meetings with eight repressive monarchies in the Middle East since the ‘Arab Spring’ protests of 2011 threatened their power. Charles has played a key role in promoting £14.5-billion worth of UK arms exports to these regimes in the last decade.
Revealed: Dozens of UK former senior officials profit from fossil fuel corporations, rubber-stamped by Whitehall committee
by MARK CURTIS | 4 February 2021
TAGGED: BP, Shell
New research reveals that dozens of senior UK defence, foreign office and intelligence officials find employment with oil, gas and mining corporations once they leave public office, rubber-stamped by a Whitehall committee which pays little attention to potential conflicts of interest. Such private profiting from energy companies is likely to restrict Britain from taking stronger action to address climate change.