Not exact matches
Counsel for the
Foreign Office told the court that the
threat to end the bilateral
intelligence relationship was still present under President Obama, but Gordon Brown said he was not aware of any such arrangement.
A «hostile state
intelligence agency», believed to be China's, is thought to have sought to penetrate the
Foreign Office's computer system earlier this week, underlining the extent of the
threat faced.
And apart from anything else, if you're running a newspaper with
foreign correspondents in strange parts of the world, as I was then, it's potentially a physical
threat to them if it's believed that they're working for British
intelligence.
The legislation raises a plethora of issues and significantly alters the security landscape: It gives the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service (CSIS) powers beyond intelligence gathering (to actively target threats and derail plots); creates new offences (criminalizing «terrorist propaganda» and the «promotion of terror»); lowers the legal threshold to trigger detention to those who may carry out an offence from the existing standard of will carry out to may carry out; extends preventive detention for «suspected» terrorists from three days to seven days (inconsistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence); legally entrenches a no fly list; and grants government agencies explicit authority to share private information with domestic and forei
Intelligence Service (CSIS) powers beyond
intelligence gathering (to actively target threats and derail plots); creates new offences (criminalizing «terrorist propaganda» and the «promotion of terror»); lowers the legal threshold to trigger detention to those who may carry out an offence from the existing standard of will carry out to may carry out; extends preventive detention for «suspected» terrorists from three days to seven days (inconsistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence); legally entrenches a no fly list; and grants government agencies explicit authority to share private information with domestic and forei
intelligence gathering (to actively target
threats and derail plots); creates new offences (criminalizing «terrorist propaganda» and the «promotion of terror»); lowers the legal threshold to trigger detention to those who may carry out an offence from the existing standard of will carry out to may carry out; extends preventive detention for «suspected» terrorists from three days to seven days (inconsistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence); legally entrenches a no fly list; and grants government agencies explicit authority to share private information with domestic and
foreign entities.
To Federal and
foreign government
intelligence or counterterrorism agencies or components when DHS becomes aware of an indication of a
threat or potential
threat to national or international security, or when such use is to conduct national
intelligence and security investigations or assist in anti-terrorism efforts.