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Spy chiefs warn about Rus­sian vic­tory

Heads of MI6 and French DGSE say Ukraine’s defeat would threaten Europe

A Rus­sian vic­tory in Ukraine would “embolden” Moscow’s allies and endanger US secur­ity, Brit­ish spy chief Richard Moore said yes­ter­day, as he called for endur­ing sup­port for Kyiv as Don­ald Trump pre­pares to take office.

“If Putin is allowed to suc­ceed in redu­cing Ukraine to a vas­sal state, he will not stop there,” Moore said in Paris. “Our secur­ity — Brit­ish, French, European and transat­lantic — would be jeop­ard­ised.”

Moore, who heads the UK for­eign intel­li­gence ser­vice MI6, said his agency and French coun­ter­part DGSE were work­ing to pre­vent a dan­ger­ous escal­a­tion by “cal­ib­rat­ing the risk” of Rus­sian Pres­id­ent Vladi­mir Putin’s “mix of bluster and aggres­sion”.

He stressed the import­ance of con­tin­ued west­ern sup­port to Kyiv, although Trump has said he would end the war in 24 hours — com­ments that sug­ges­ted the US pres­id­ent-elect might press Kyiv to agree a deal favour­able to Moscow.

“The cost of sup­port­ing Ukraine is well known but the cost of not doing so would be infin­itely higher,” Moore warned. “China would weigh the implic­a­tions, North Korea would be emboldened, and Iran would become still more dan­ger­ous.”

Moore, who appeared along­side his French coun­ter­part, Nic­olas Lerner, was speak­ing at an event to mark the 120th anniversary of the entente cor­diale, a mil­it­ary and dip­lo­matic agree­ment that bound the two coun­tries as allies. Lerner said the war in Ukraine had “put the col­lect­ive secur­ity of the whole of Europe . . . at stake” but that events in the Indo-Pacific could put “the future of the world at stake”.

Many European offi­cials fear that Trump’s “Amer­ica First” agenda could jeop­ard­ise transat­lantic rela­tions, and have been alarmed by some of the US pres­id­ent-elect’s nom­in­ees for secur­ity and defence posts.

One is Tulsi Gab­bard, pick to be dir­ector of national intel­li­gence, who has at times seem­ingly repeated Rus­sian pro­pa­ganda points. She has falsely cited as an “undeni­able fact” that there were US-fun­ded bio­labs in Ukraine that could “release and spread deadly patho­gens”.

But Moore said the US and UK alli­ance had “for dec­ades . . . made our soci­et­ies safer”, adding: “I worked suc­cess­fully with the first Trump admin­is­tra­tion . . . and look for­ward to doing so again.”

The rare joint appear­ance by the two intel­li­gence chiefs is the most recent example of west­ern spies com­ing out of the shad­ows to high­light what they see as grow­ing threats to the inter­na­tional order. In Septem­ber, Moore and CIA chief Bill Burns made an unpre­ced­en­ted pub­lic appear­ance in Lon­don.

At the Paris event, Moore said that dur­ing his “37 years in the intel­li­gence pro­fes­sion, I’ve never seen the world in a more dan­ger­ous state”.

As well as Ukraine, Moore warned about the con­flict in the Middle East, say­ing “we have yet to have a full reck­on­ing with the rad­ic­al­ising impact of the fight­ing and ter­rible loss of inno­cent life . . . after the hor­rors of [Hamas’s] Octo­ber 7” attack on Israel last year.

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