The campaign by former Tory MP Louise Mensch, recently
joined by serving MP Julian Smith, to have the deeply subversive Guardian hit with terrorism charges, the
Official Secrets Act, or anything else they can think of, yesterday fell apart
in the face of reality. For Smith, there was added humiliation as the paper
exposed his own potential breach of that “National
Security” he loves to talk of.
The accusation made by both Ms Mensch and Smith can be
stated plainly: they have convinced themselves that the Guardian has not only made the material from former NSA contractor
Edward Snowden available to other media outlets, but that they have also copied
and distributed (or, as Ms Mensch likes to put it for dramatic effect, “trafficked”) information
identifying members of the security services.
Smith went as far as to secure a debate in Westminster Hall,
where
he trotted out the accusation again, before making a complaint to the
Metropolitan Police, and including it one more time for good measure.
Statements by minister James Brokenshire to his debate, and Young Dave later in
the week, reassured Smith. He clearly thought he was on a winning streak.
And then came the
Guardian’s expose yesterday of
Smith’s own potential security lapse: the MP had entertained a group of staff
from RAF Menwith Hill at the Commons. This base, despite the name, is, as the Guardian has reminded readers, “the NSA’s chief eavesdropping hub in Europe”.
Hence the headline “Did Conservative MP
Julian Smith endanger national security?”
After all, these are people working for the security
services, and Smith has identified them – hence the pixelated faces – rather as
he has accused the Guardian of doing,
although with no evidence to back up his accusation. Ms Mensch immediately
leapt to Smith’s defence, but his excuse, “The
people that came on that trip would have
given me full permission to use any photograph” is less than
convincing.
Not waving but drowning
So when Ms Mensch says “he
had permission to post it”, she may be wrong. And where she most certainly is wrong is in accusing the Guardian of identifying security
personnel: in the same article, the paper responds to Smith. “He wrongly claimed it had distributed
information about British intelligence agents”. That means they didn’t. The
accusation, as I’ve said previously, was wild and unfounded.
What, then, of Louise Mensch’s campaign? Will she now withdraw
gracefully, with whatever remains of her credibility that can be salvaged? Not
a bit of it: she’s just carrying on as before, re-heating an accusation that
has just been shown to be dishonest, and probably malicious. In the meantime,
Julian Smith ought to think himself lucky if the Met don’t charge him with wasting
Police time.
These two clowns should now leave the stage, but won’t. No change there, then.
Seems to be a concerted attempt by Murdoch's merry minions to smear or rubbish The Guardian as much as possible.
ReplyDeleteNOTW had form with infiltrating public institutions political and policing. Perhaps they (and their associates) were involved behind the secret veil too? Given they had their own "dark arts" methods it wouldn't be inconceivable that some form of cooperation took place.
Will the Daniel Morgan Murder Mystery Inquiry Panel give us a clue?