Britain’s opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn on Friday said the so-called war on terror was “simply not working” and linked British military action abroad with the rising threat of terrorism at home, as he restarted election campaigning days after a suicide bomber killed 22 in Manchester.
The Labour Party leader linked foreign interventions, including in Libya, to terrorism in Britain, and criticized cuts to police under the Conservative government.
Election campaigning for next month’s general election was suspended after Salman Abedi exploded a suicide bomb at an Ariana Grande concert at the Manchester Arena on Monday. Seven children were among those killed.
Abedi is believed to have travelled at the age of 16 to Libya in 2011 during the British-backed uprising against longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi.
Corbyn said in his speech in London: “Our approach would involve change at home and abroad.
“We will reverse cuts to emergency services and police. We cannot be protected and careful at on the cheap. There will be more police on the streets under a Labour government. The polcie and security services need more resources to keep track of those who wish to murder and maim.
Abroad, he said: “Soldiers will only be deployed when there is a clear need and only when… there is a plan that delivers lasting peace.
“Many experts, including professionals in our intelligence and security services have pointed to the connections between wars our government has supported or fought in other countries and terrorism here at home”.
“Those causes certainly cannot be reduced to foreign policy decisions alone. Over the past fifteen years or so, a sub-culture of often suicidal violence has developed among a tiny minority of, mainly young, men, falsely drawing authority from Islamic beliefs and often nurtured in a prison system in urgent need of resources and reform.
“That assessment in no way reduces the guilt of those who attack our children. Those terrorists will forever be reviled and held to account for their actions. Corbyn voted against Britain’s war in Iraq in 2003, the Libya intervention and British military action in Syria. He is to say a Labour government would offer a different direction in foreign policy.
Corbyn voted against Britain’s war in Iraq in 2003, the Libya intervention and British military action in Syria. He is to say a Labour government would offer a different direction in foreign policy.
Last year, the British parliament’s powerful foreign affairs select committee criticized the British government’s failure to develop a coherent strategy for Libya after Gaddafi’s fall.
Six years on, Libya has no overall government, is beset with battles between competing militias, has been infiltrated by the Islamic State group and is the main transit point for hundreds of thousands of migrants and refugees attempting to reach Europe.
Ben Wallace, Britain’s security minister, told the BBC that Corbyn’s comments were “inappropriate and crassly timed” while Tim Farron, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, said on Twitter that Corbyn was “putting politics before people at a time of tragedy”.The Labour leader was also expected to criticize cuts to police numbers in Britain, saying the country could not protect itself “on the cheap”.
The British home secretary, Amber Rudd, on Thursday rejected assertions that the loss of 19,000 officers since 2010 had affected British security.
Rudd told the BBC Question Time program: “I don’t accept that. I have asked the head of counter-terrorism whether this is about resources. It is not.
“There may be a conversation to have about policing, we may have that at some stage. But now is not that conversation.”
Intelligence sharing resumes
Meanwhile, British police said on Thursday they had resumed “working closely” with the US on the Manchester bombing investigation after a row over leaking of information to the American media.
Mark Rowley, the UK’s most senior counter-terrorism officer, confirmed Britain had “received fresh assurances” from the US that they could be trusted with confidential material.
Britain had earlier in the day suspended co-operation following the leaking of information about Abedi, and pictures of the remnants of the device he used in Monday’s attack on the Manchester Arena.
Rowley said: “Having received fresh assurances, we are now working closely with our key partners around the world including all those in the Five Eyes intelligence alliance.”
At a NATO summit in Brussels the British prime minister, Theresa May, confronted Donald Trump with her concerns about security lapses.
The US president vowed to investigate, calling the leaks “deeply troubling” and warning the sources of the security lapse could be prosecuted.
In the years leading up to Monday’s attack, it was said Abedi was known to security services, but his risk to the public remained “subject to review” and MI5 considered him a “former subject of interest”, a Whitehall source said.
Police hunting the “network” behind his attack said they had made “significant” arrests and seized “very important” items in raids.
May said Britain’s terrorism threat level remained at critical, meaning another attack is expected imminently.
Eight suspects aged between 18 and 38 are in custody, Greater Manchester police said on Thursday.
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