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MI5 'too stretched' before 7 July | MI5 'too stretched' before 7 July |
(20 minutes later) | |
The security service did not have the manpower to do extra checks on the 7 July ringleader before he carried out the attacks in 2005, a report has said. | The security service did not have the manpower to do extra checks on the 7 July ringleader before he carried out the attacks in 2005, a report has said. |
But the Intelligence and Security Committee declined to criticise MI5, which it said had other priorities. | |
It stressed that while officers knew of Mohammad Sidique Khan's terrorist links, there was no evidence to suggest he was a threat to national security. | It stressed that while officers knew of Mohammad Sidique Khan's terrorist links, there was no evidence to suggest he was a threat to national security. |
Fifty-two people were killed in the suicide bombings in London in 2005. | Fifty-two people were killed in the suicide bombings in London in 2005. |
The long-awaited report describes in unprecedented detail what officers knew of Khan before the attacks. | The long-awaited report describes in unprecedented detail what officers knew of Khan before the attacks. |
It reveals that a police surveillance team photographed him in 2001 as part of an operation against suspected extremists. | It reveals that a police surveillance team photographed him in 2001 as part of an operation against suspected extremists. |
However, he was not identified from the picture - and his significance was only realised after the bombings. | However, he was not identified from the picture - and his significance was only realised after the bombings. |
'Astounding' | |
The report reveals that MI5 teams were stretched almost to breaking point in 2004 - the year before the attacks - attempting to trace terror suspects around the UK. | |
During that year, MI5 did not have the resources to watch 52 suspects who were classed as "essential targets". | |
In fact, the security service could only provide "reasonable" surveillance coverage of about one in 20 terror suspects - a fact the committee described as "astounding". | |
In that context, it said the decision not to follow Khan after he had initially appeared on radar was understandable, taking into account operational pressures. | |
But the MPs said that given the amount of information held on Khan, it was "surprising" that they did not identify him prior to 7 July. |