The UK should be on alert for possible acts of sabotage, Richard Dearlove has warned
The UK government should treat the Ukraine conflict as “an actual war” with Russia, former MI6 chief Richard Dearlove has said.
Dearlove, who led the Secret Intelligence Service from 1999 to 2004, made his comments Wednesday, during a conversation with journalist Sophy Ridge on Sky News.
Ridge noted that Moscow had blacklisted dozens of UK officials earlier this week and asked Dearlove how the British government should respond.
“We have to face up to the fact that the Russians think they’re in a state of war with us,” the former spymaster said.
“[Polish Prime Minister] Donald Tusk has referred to it as a pre-war situation. I think he’s wrong. I think it’s an actual war,” he added.
“Now, that doesn’t mean in the Russian mind, the military conflict, but it means hybrid conflict or different types of conflict in different arenas of interest,” Dearlove said, warning about possible “sabotage.”
At the same time, given the “extraordinary” nature of the conflict, the UK should keep some lines of communication open. “It’s probably better to have some sort of dialogue with them than no contact at all,” he said.
Russian officials have repeatedly stated that Western military aid to Ukraine amounts to their de facto direct participation in the conflict.
The UK remains one of Kiev’s top suppliers, having delivered Challenger 2 tanks and other types of heavy weapons. According to Bloomberg, the government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer has recently delivered additional Anglo-French Storm Shadow/SCALP-EG cruise missiles to Ukraine.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has argued that Ukraine’s strikes with sophisticated long-range missiles are impossible without direct involvement of NATO personnel. He warned that Moscow would retaliate against such attacks on Russian soil.
Moscow has also accused the US and the UK of being behind the 2022 sabotage of the Nord Stream twin pipelines built to deliver Russian gas to Germany through the Baltic Sea. Both countries have denied their involvement.