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Senior Policemaen says UK 'should talk' to al-Qaeda

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SO19
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Senior Policemaen says UK 'should talk' to al-Qaeda

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Top cop says UK 'should talk' to al-Qaeda
Times Online

One of Britain’s most senior policemen has said that the Government should negotiate with al-Qaeda in a strategy to end its campaign of violence.

In an interview with The Guardian, Sir Hugh Orde, head of the Police Service of Northern Ireland, said that he could not think of a single terrorism campaign in history that ended without negotiation.

Sir Hugh, reportedly a front-runner to be the next commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said that 30 years of tackling the IRA convinced him that policing - detecting plots and arresting people - was not enough alone to defeat terrorists.

He told the newspaper: “If you want my professional assessment of any terrorism campaign, what fixes it is talking and engaging and judging when the conditions are right for that to take place.

“Is that a naive statement? I don’t think it is ... It is the reality of what we face. If somebody can show me any terrorism campaign where it has been policed out, I’d be happy to read about it, because I can’t think of one.”

Sir Hugh admits that negotiating with terrorists means “thinking the unthinkable” and said that some of the biggest risks his officers took were talking to people that “historically they would not have dreamed of talking to”.

He cites his meeting in 2004 with the Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams as an example of how one-time enemies can become partners in peace.

Asked if he was saying “we should talk to al-Qaeda”, Sir Hugh told the newspaper: “Well that’s the logic of...I don’t think that’s unthinkable, the question will be one of timing.”

He also called for the number of police forces to be slashed from 43 to nine to better fight terrorism and gave warning that the threat from dissident republicans in Ulster was at its greatest in five years.

On Tuesday terrorists attempted to fire-bomb a JJB sports shop in Belfast but failed after the device failed to properly detonate. Sir Hugh said Irish terrorists still wanted to bomb the UK mainland, but lacked the capability. They were still attempting to buy weapons but were disorganised, “psychopathic” and probably numbering no more than 200 people.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/u ... 032385.ece
[i]‘We are not interested in the possibilities of defeat’ - Queen Victoria, 1899[/i]
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Post by barrybudden »

What did Sir Hugh do? He was picked by the government for the PSNI job to keep going with the reforms when Ronnie left.
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Post by SO19 »

al-Qaeda is not Sinn Féin IRA.
[i]‘We are not interested in the possibilities of defeat’ - Queen Victoria, 1899[/i]
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Post by Tab »

All sides will want to talk before any thing can be achieved, and the Taliban will look upon any approaches as a sign of weakness.
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