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2025年9月29日 星期一

From Cryptography to the Commons: The Unconventional Career of Baroness Manningham-Buller

 

From Cryptography to the Commons: The Unconventional Career of Baroness Manningham-Buller

Baroness Eliza Manningham-Buller, former Director General of MI5 and current life peer in the House of Lords, has forged a remarkable career defined by navigating the most critical security and scientific challenges of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Her journey—from teaching to the pinnacle of British intelligence and later into medical science—provides a unique perspective on public service, national security, and global threats.


A Family Heritage of Intelligence

The Baroness's path was subtly influenced by her family's background in government and intelligence. Her father served as Attorney General in Harold Macmillan's government, but perhaps more unconventionally, her mother worked for secret intelligence during the Second World War: she bred carrier pigeons. These pigeons were parachuted into occupied France to bring back messages strapped to their ankles. One such pigeon was later recorded as having brought back crucial intelligence on the German V2 site at Peenemünde, an act for which the bird was awarded the Dickin Medal.


Three Decades in MI5: From the IRA to 9/11

Baroness Manningham-Buller's professional life was dominated by her 33-year tenure at the Security Service, MI5.

  • Initial Years and the IRA: She joined the service in 1974, initially believing she was joining an independent branch of the Ministry of Defence. A key early role came in 1992, when she was brought back from Washington D.C. to start a new section focused on collecting intelligence on Provisional IRA activity in mainland Britain. She noted the police's initial unhappiness with the transfer of responsibility but underscored her organization's role in the peace process, including encouraging the government and understanding the provisionals' intentions.

  • Leadership Through Crisis: She served as Deputy Director General from 1997 to 2002, and then as Director General from 2002 to 2007. Her directorship covered a period of escalating Islamist terrorism. She took over just a year after 9/11, an event she and her colleagues had "been expecting" in the abstract, but one that was unprecedented in its scale.

  • The Rule of Law: Throughout her career, she stressed the vital importance of the rule of law in intelligence work. While she acknowledged past mistakes in Northern Ireland, she maintained that the legal framework is "fundamental to doing intelligence work," ensuring powers to intrude on privacy are controlled, authorized, proportionate, and necessary.

Defining Moments in Global Security

The Baroness's experience offered unique insight into key historical events:

  • The Cuban Missile Crisis vs. 1983: While many view the Cuban Missile Crisis as the most dangerous Cold War moment, she highlighted the peril of 1983, when the Russians misinterpreted a NATO exercise as a preemptive nuclear strike. She credited information received from the Russians and the ability to "unscramble the exercise and defuse the situation" as averting a potentially catastrophic nuclear exchange.

  • Lockerbie Bombing (1988): She was closely involved in the Lockerbie investigation, setting up an intelligence cell in a local school soon after the tragedy. She defended the investigation's final conclusion, noting the compelling evidence: a recovered circuit board from the bomb belonged to a batch sold to the Libyans, and clothing recovered near the blast seat pointed to a Maltese connection.


The New Threats: Climate, China, and Technology

After leaving MI5, the Baroness served as Chair of the Wellcome Trust, where she focused on science and global health, shifting her attention to modern threats:

  • Climate Change: She regards climate change as the greatest threat to the UK, predicting that its effects on water, disease, food shortages, and mass migration will be dramatic and destabilizing.

  • The Erosion of Soft Power: In confronting China's global influence (like the Belt and Road Initiative), she warned that Western cuts to foreign aid and withdrawal from the world create a vacuum. She argued that soft power—via organizations like the BBC World Service, aid, and demining charities—is crucial to maintaining influence and preventing rivals from filling the void.

  • Technology's Dark Side: She expressed profound anxiety over "the horrors on the internet," particularly the availability of appalling images of torture and murder that children can access on their phones, raising deep concerns about the impact on impressionable, undeveloped minds.