MI5 MAN FACES NEW CHARGE
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP96B01172R000300020013-4
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
7
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
July 28, 2005
Sequence Number:
13
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 1, 1983
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
Approved For Release 2005/08/03: CIA-RDP96B0117 00R2 0300020013-4 1'R
irking up
i I :!ter Rantzen on
r rig to terms with
death ofa baby
.,i?king on
Cicvision 20 years
u;~!11 t1C)~V: hart 2
t ::lirng in
! . rs l hatcher i eets
nccllor Kohl:
iiinvon reports
rig back
avnc I)v Pat
Ile
'.1umt!n he loved
'1Ir,>pirig in
diilhrences between
lsions of
''i'ki and Afghun!stan
man
laces
110V charge
i olliccr on secrets
Michael l3ettaney, has
ur!her Charged with
n ;n assessment by the
:cncc services of a KGB
I. operating in Britain
Page 3
seeks #3bn
.i d tor poor
ci union leaders will be
keci to approve an economic
~,Ilcv which requires extra
crnmerl! spending of almost
on lire j)oorest, sections of
Page 2
quake
c.:-,i.,rnake in eastern China
Peoplc, according to
tluudreds of
destroyed or
,ind resuce operations
,fer' oral.
urkey braced
gprove Fo
',t \ awaits the reaction of
military regime to the
to hcrl:ind Party which won a
m President Assad .ofSyria veslerdayicalledLLup IOO , QDO
reservists to counter "si
s
gn
of agression"'ipj ~i e
..nv vndC
States forces.
? Fears of a wider flare-up'-In` T eb non -grew 'with- the
atheri
f
g
ng o
29 American warships with 300 aircrafS~
offered by Sir Geoffrey as "an GCHQ. is.. a potential, security
offensive bribe". "They already hazard as they: are not pdsstfVely
have the loyalty of these people.: ' ' 0 . vetfed nut, nearly,. Mires
it was proved in , 1981. when ago, union le}lders wen
despite the pay '.dispute all Ca . t ,. ! that t e Ur}ltied.Sta sad o
~"`s::; t' ~yootinoedon - C,f.
atti
security work at Cheltenh $aio*
GCHQ union ban blamed
on pressure-from US
Continued from page 1
Nato allies were unhappy that a
national one-day stoppage and
further industrial sanctions at
Cheltenham and the tracking
station at Bude in Cornwall
would damage strategic cover of
signals traffic and hamper the
surveillance of Soviet warships.
In their announcement on
March 8, 1981, the unions said:
"There will be a range of
selective and disruptive action.
which will affect Britain's secret
communications surveillance
network. There will be both
national and international re-
percussions."
Mr Len Murray, general
secretary of the TUC, is to meet
leaders of the civil service
unions this morning. Last night,
he said: "This decision by the
Foreign Secretary, made with-
out consultation- or ''ttdvande'
notice to unions whatsoever, is
an appalling and unacceptable
denial of basic -rights.,
"Civil servants, whatever
their work, deserve and require
the protection of the union and
proper union representation
just as much as other workers.
"It is grossly offensive for the
Foreign Secretary to imply that
the fact of trade union member-
ship poses any :threat to
national security. .If there are or
may bC problems of any sort the
Foreign 'Secretary should spell
out what they are and' discuss
them with unions concerned,
not jump to the most extreme
measure possible.
..The offer of a tame, state-
controlled union, backed up by'
#1,000, bribes'. is no alternative
to the right of genuine trade;
union - membership
The Government has set a
deadline of March 1 for GCHQ
erttpttl"W_Vo'?eae -1;". ,
gratis payments, . I
Approved For Release 2005/08/03 : CIA-RDP96B01172R000300020013-4
117
2R000 0 20013-4
Approved For Releas 3 m2w
71 -f-,15
~k..
1 1 Civil Service dispute
r4ntelligence efforts
were imperilled
*Pnar Htm ssey
q- it Robert Sec- any other present security
l~ry'ot.as .admitted worries. The decision, stemmed
yesterday that the five-month solely from the assessment of
Z]vil swiss to in 198, the 1981 damye and the
ystos Britain's Government's radetermination
'{n - He was that the vital w material of
~ Sna Ling in the British intelligence shall not be
Ocoee 4dfr1 the general jaopordized spin.
aaaa~aft1dd of Whitehall unions. The agency employs 10,000
yGovernmenI has never people at Cheltenham and
assessment: -of the. around the world, some 60 per
tSaugge htfrllad by the?dlepute cent of whom belong. to unions.
.sites yens.aad. HowevW.it led ' It now seems that the Cabinet
to intent aanndd insistent pressure has been contemplating such a
from the Reagan Adminis- move for three years. It was
tration that ministers intervene decided to wait until the 1983
a raarsihe inW Bgeatco flow. election was past as it was "such
Usdt,at eserw 1946 tratyi a big step to take".
Brlatla.had the United States In the aAennath of Prime,
pane, oat the maxld between there are unconfirmed reports
than ?!r. "the purposes of that MIS has uncovered a small
ptiafnZ11- and eMilitant Tendency call at
M is- xmsuatt supply Cheltenham. It is said to consist
isdsemeort a monitor- of about six people who belong
ia~ of at ihary and diplo-- to the Civil and Public Services
made lalMtien of the-Soviet 'Association and the society of
~Untoayaand .ths,-Warsaw pact Civil and Public Servant.
Ib National Security Apti-, ecial Investigation into the
ry. for UB alvelant of the of nding of a one-day conference
Oovaromag? Communisations: on polygraphs hold at the
Haadawrtee(OCHO).in Chet Festival Hall in London on
techam,.which.if to be de-uniO- December 6. The Society of
rued, Nods a substantial Civil and Public Servants.
pso~!stIos of-kiss British Ron which organized it, has invited
tCb. aapenslvat capital latest- Idadin` anti-pot ph outh-
tlw, brmeh .of espionya it. urity from the united States,
peovida advaae d,opwpment; Professor David Lykken. at
and aeoooded;.persoonal .Corr psychologist from the Univer-
(~tlsabaq's world-wide net- sity of Minnesota to the
work of Basooing:posts, known, conference.
a the C C Signal'. . Sir Robert Armstrong tried
Orpoikallea. TM, product Jtl, earlier this month to defuse
pooedandMlyad)mndri - union hostility to lie-detectors
on,-MUeh 9,1-1981, the first which are to be used at
day of the dii oti?Wahingtoir Cheltenham on an experimental
was Incensd wheat a walkout of basis from April I. In a letter
technician, closed the station dated January 9 to the Council
on Ascension Island, the West's of Civil Unions, he wrote:
listening Heat in the South-. "There is no decision to
Atlantic, and the tracking from that to a scheme
. the definitive introduction
station at Buda in: Cornwall or
Bumf monitor the path of of the polygraph in security
Solvet spy satellites slithery pass screening. That decision re-
over the eaten Atlantic and mains entirely open, and will be
Western Europe, feeding its for consideration when we are
data to the immensely secret in a position to assess and
National Reconnaissance Office analyse the results of the pilot
is Washington.' . ... . study." .
?,Spond ..disruption. con-. Aunion source mid last night
tinned tm a five months." If MidOPPoaiuoa to the lygraph
affected routine intelligence would have been likely to
gathers from Scarbourvush crumble eventually at Chelten?
(which listens in to the North ham If the Government had
9a and ?t s Balde), to the UK stood firm. With the loss of
Sovasasan Bee in Cyprus and union recasnition, he added,
Littk_Sai Wan, the Hongkong resistance to lie-detectors would
stations 7!he bjan.rah exu ire, be redoubled.
Wlntex 81n' which Nato GCHQ is the successor
nations simulated the transition organization to the Oovem?
-to wor with the a~ Warsaw Pact =Code and Cypber School
whieft It had been estimated in
Last year the very special the Second World War shoe
Intelligence retationship of the tend the conflict by some I8
last 38 year wa also strained months by penetrating the most
with the' conviction of the secret codes and cyphers of the
former OCHQ linguist. Goof- German, Italian and Japanese
trey PrimR' Ibt_ _ tpy for armed forces.
-waYiirl9el ?ryk+"t i , Bjata : I WS its .area have,
Al the Insistence of the been conccntrntcd on the Soviet
Reign Administration, t'te Union and its attellites, at.
British Cabinet was forced to though other nations such ns
approve the a00lieatio6 of lie- Argentina, which is ^ prime
detaemn or polygraphs, to target of the Asmsion Island
member of the'seeurity and station because of the Falk-
iesdllpsnafabaLkMi The Civil lands, constantly watched. It
sit V eM as ok*ted on civil' focuses mainly on military and
Ilbgrdriitt said eflkleh diplomatic traffic, but since the
sitting' that. US 19706 them has been a growing
ae~taieeppeOep showed polygraphs effort to glean eaaeomie and
rotith18h1yunMiable: financial information.
At'a mwih soh the anions The unionization of GCHQ
cif J~iy IL 'SR Rabart'Armatmng "has stood out a calls, for years",
twisted that the Government one insider said yesterday, a
wmm f s Is had t with' ash the, MIS and the Secret Intelligence
I IM Of Pilot feheme Berviai MI6, an strictly y non.
Hewaver, as the union. Other parts of the
usimsW of the ntactin record: intelligence eoaa'anity do
Heine woua'not find the as contain union members, how-
of ~a *a 1? .
glow"Ity 1 Cbmm salon the ever. would
ban cos extended
pm the Prime ball security ad lnWBgence
the she' f area.
Thiess: include civilian mem-
ygg Mve deletr6d
?.. bers n of of the 900.strona Defence
The 1;i; M savloe.. MIS; Ietewe Spff in the Minis.
MAN varyaepweu tee, try of txtsncc
bass these this ana0vmie8 ? of The as of Lleutsnans-COb
PrlYSi irtvelpgadag -llient, std' John Wafts, a tanner
:=. 4 jM. unproved, Number of OC'HQ. who took
hin he had cal acted his demotion an reaching the
dlono Tian have Dan LWI? retiring up of 60 fn 1979, to on
! MS~r. Ida ` a as )sduatnal tribunal bah penis y
j~pal toooerned, tHi woeMase
iwta6iaYv and invent at -dthie bibsbuR1a.wm his sae
lf-gaw. ?n4 data mdsr at Woak but it was
snatb/.` . , alias idrin the Cara of Appeal
bodiless tM Nome dccW m c b
Removal of
o es Ren the
8/03: CIA-RDP96B01172R000300020013-4
woadtusigw m &~p
mportant element in the
m i
cop ly ~tsYr ?aLPelas tar .Cabisafs de=elm r bar YYIOIIs
Approved For Releas
1981 Civil Service dispute
:Intelligence efforts
-were imperilled