Counter Terrorism investigations reach record high | Counter Terrorism Policing

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Counter Terrorism investigations reach record high

Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu

The UK’s most senior Counter Terrorism officer has revealed the number of active Counter Terrorism investigations has reached a record high.

Assistant Commissioner of Specialist Operations (ACSO) Neil Basu told the Home Affairs Select Committee today, Wednesday 24 October, that there are more than 700 on-going counter terrorism investigations – up from around 650 earlier this year – with Counter Terrorism Policing and MI5 working together on more than 500 of those.

Mr Basu told the Committee that despite preventing 17 attacks – including four right wing plots – since March 2017, it is becoming increasingly difficult for police and the security services to stay ahead of the risk posed to the public.

“In 2017, we learned that these attacks were not a temporary escalation but a sustained shift in the threat,” he said.

“Today, the UK Counter Terrorism Machine continues to run red hot.

“Together Counter Terrorism Policing and MI5 are working on a record high of over 700 live investigations, and despite thinking that our biggest threat was returning or directed by foreign fighters, the majority of terrorists who have attacked and plotted are here and are inspired by UK or dual UK nationals.

“Since the Westminster attack in March of last year, we have stopped 17 attacks, and I expect these figures to increase.”

Mr Basu went on to explain that this record high in investigations was taking place alongside the Counter Terrorism Policing investigation into suspected hostile state activity in Salisbury, as well as the most extensive review of the UK Counter Terrorism machine in a decade.

“To keep ahead of the game we need to make the changes we have identified to government,” he said.

“But it’s like fine-tuning a formula one car while it’s still going round the track setting lap records.”

ACSO Basu told the Committee that changes to the Counter Terrorism Policing funding arrangement are required if we are to maintain the UK’s Counter Terrorism Policing Network.

He said: “My predecessor said that despite our best endeavours, we are not yet as well matched to the threat as we were a few years ago.

“That is, unfortunately, still true today.

“Matching the new threat – including that from the extreme right wing and suspected hostile state actors – will require new ways of working and for us to maintain our resources, including those for local police forces.

“But this is extremely difficult when Counter Terrorism Policing is always working to short-term funding arrangements.

“It would be easier for us to have a funding settlement made over five years, a settlement which was manoeuvrable.

“Having to go back every year to get funding for large projects that require many years to come to fruition is very difficult.

“A longer-term funding settlement would greatly assist us to protect and improve a national police, security service and government tri-partite approach which has been honed over decades, and which remains world-class.”