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9/11 TORTURE RAP

MPs slam Britain’s three spy agencies for not stopping the torture of terror suspects after 9/11

Parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee is to deliver its findings after a five-year probe

ALL three British spy agencies will be bitterly criticised by MPs for failing to stop terror suspects from being tortured after 9/11.

After a five-year long investigation, Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee will deliver the findings of two detailed inquiries into detainees’ mistreatment.

 MI6 officers are to be singled out for the toughest criticism over not doing enough to halt the U.S. and other allies from abusing al Qaeda suspects
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MI6 officers are to be singled out for the toughest criticism over not doing enough to halt the U.S. and other allies from abusing al Qaeda suspectsCredit: Alamy

But The Sun has also learnt that their “brutal” verdicts have already sparked a bitter backlash in the intelligence community, some who feel “sold out”.

No UK personnel will be accused of carrying out torture themselves by the MPs.

But the committee will single out MI6 officers for the toughest criticism over not doing enough to halt the U.S. and other allies from abusing al Qaeda suspects around them.

It will also hammer the foreign spy agency’s chiefs at the time, as well as lawyers, for failing to train field officers on what to do in the difficult situations.

 Security figures criticised the MPs - led by former Attorney General Dominic Grieve – for ignoring the extreme historical context of the event
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Security figures criticised the MPs - led by former Attorney General Dominic Grieve – for ignoring the extreme historical context of the eventCredit: PA:Press Association

One senior Whitehall source has dubbed the reports’ verdict as “brutal”.

Security figures criticised the MPs - led by former Attorney General Dominic Grieve – for ignoring the extreme historical context of the events, which came amid a global panic in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.

One figure said: “It was an extremely difficult time, during which intelligence officers from MI5, MI6 and GCHQ acted with true heroism and saved a lot of lives.

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“Put simply, some of them were just in the wrong room at the wrong time, but have been put through the wringer over what they saw ever since.

“It is a shame that context has not been fully reflected.”

Some of the events of concern detailed by the MPs go back more than 16 years.

One of the most serious took place in January 2002, when a team of MI5 and MI6 officers arrived at Bagram airbase in Afghanistan to interview detainees being held by the CIA, already being subjected to “enhanced interrogation techniques”.

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The ISC will also concede that the vast majority of lessons have already been learnt by the spy agencies, but still suggest their own tweaks to the new codes of conduct.

In a recent speech, MI6 Chief Alex Younger conceded: “We have learnt tough lessons.

“But we have used the last 15 years to develop new and effective capabilities.

“We can put our officers where they need to be, in some of the most challenging locations imaginable, with the support they need to stay safe and the guidance and training required to navigate complex and ethically hazardous environments.”

One of the ISC’s reports deals with the mistreatment and rendition of terror suspects from 2001-2010, and the second looks at current issues.

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