The History of British Military Intelligence
Spies, Strategy, and the Making of a Global Intelligence System
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3 Months Free
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Narrated by:
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Melissa Wise
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By:
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Alastair Penrose
In the British state, intelligence does not begin with a single founding moment or a clearly defined institution. It begins instead as a tension, a contradiction embedded within the machinery of government itself. Public money is quietly allocated for secret purposes, debated in open parliamentary chambers where the very act of discussion risks undermining the thing being funded. Ministers stand to justify expenditure that cannot be fully explained, offering assurances that the work is necessary while acknowledging, sometimes indirectly, that its details must remain concealed. From the outset, intelligence is both visible and invisible, acknowledged and denied, structured yet deliberately obscured.
The early nineteenth-century debates around “secret service money” reveal this paradox with striking clarity. These were not minor procedural exchanges. There were arguments about principle, about the limits of state power, and about the role of secrecy within a system that prided itself on accountability. Members of Parliament questioned how funds could be approved without detailed scrutiny, while those in government insisted that certain matters could not be exposed without damaging national security. The language may have been formal, but the underlying concern was unmistakable: how far could a democratic state go in protecting itself without compromising its own values?
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