logo
Blaise Metreweli

Blaise Metreweli

The Hindu2 days ago

The best way for real to reflect reel could well be a spy thriller, arguably. James Bond's 'M' is now 'C', a woman, powerful and savvy enough to take on the world. And in a world where, increasingly, fact seems like fiction and fiction, fact, Britain has appointed a woman to its secret intelligence agency. Seldom have the two overlapped so effortlessly as when Blaise Metreweli was named as the first woman chief of Britain's MI6.
Ms. Metreweli will be the 18th Chief of the MI6, coming in at a time when geopolitics is more in tune with a Mission Impossible world than the racy, but dated intrigue of the Cold War espionage that James Bond played amidst. Adversaries have changed, goalposts have shifted, and the tools of war constitute even more fancy technology than Bond's most creative tech guy 'Q' could even fathom. Ironically enough, Ms. Metreweli is currently Director General 'Q' in MI6, responsible for technology and innovation. Earlier she was with the MI5, Britain secret service agency for domestic intelligence.
Ms. Metreweli, who will succeed Sir Richard Moore, will be referred to as 'C', as all chiefs of the MI6 are, going back to the initial used by the agency's first head, Captain Sir Mansfield Smith-Cumming.
The main mission of the MI6 or the Secret Intelligence Service is to collect foreign intelligence for the United Kingdom. U.K.'s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, said: 'The historic appointment of Blaise Metreweli comes at a time when the work of our intelligence services has never been more vital. The United Kingdom is facing threats on an unprecedented scale — be it aggressors who send their spy ships to our waters or hackers whose sophisticated cyber plots seek to disrupt our public services.'
While a female 'M' played fabulously by a formidable Dame Judi Dench dominates recent public memory, it was only in 1995 that, inspired by Stella Rimington (the first female head of MI5), 'M' became female.
It was about the same time that Ms. Metreweli, born in 1977, entered Cambridge University, to study anthropology. She graduated in 1998, and as per official records, joined the MI6 the very next year.
She reportedly spent her early career in West Asia, and has since, worked as an intelligence officer, handling counter-terrorism on the field, and taking on director level roles at the MI5.
Brush with technology
In her role as 'Q', she addressed sophisticated threats including Chinese biometric surveillance and cyberattacks from Russia.
Since her headship was confirmed, Ms. Metreweli's felicity with technology has been flaunted as a key strength in leading espionage operations in an increasingly 'post-truth' world, where guns and poisons are no longer the only weapons of choice.
The news of her appointment has been welcomed, by and large, not only because she is the first woman head of the MI6 in 116 years, but also because she is perceived as 'one of their own', one who has risen through the ranks.
Ms. Metreweli too acknowledged her kinship with the agency: 'I am proud and honoured to be asked to lead my Service. MI6 plays a vital role — with MI5 and GCHQ — in keeping the British people safe and promoting U.K. interests overseas. I look forward to continuing that work alongside the brave officers and agents of MI6 and our many international partners.'
U.K.'s Foreign Secretary David Lammy too echoed this sense of propinquity: 'With a wealth of experience from across our national security community, Blaise is the ideal candidate to lead MI6 into the future. At a time of global instability and emerging security threats, where technology is power and our adversaries are working ever closer together, Blaise will ensure the U.K. can tackle these challenges head on.'
Clearly, with Ms. Metreweli, the U.K. has made a studied choice. Perhaps we must let 'M' have the last word, slightly altered. As Dench tells Daniel Craig's James Bond in Skyfall, 'she knows the rules of the game. She has been playing it long enough.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Middle East crisis: Supertankers making U-turns near Strait of Hormuz; at least 5 rerouted
Middle East crisis: Supertankers making U-turns near Strait of Hormuz; at least 5 rerouted

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Middle East crisis: Supertankers making U-turns near Strait of Hormuz; at least 5 rerouted

Strait of Hormuz (Pic credit: AP) At least two supertankers abruptly turned back near the Strait of Hormuz following US military strikes on Iran, according to ship-tracking data, the clearest sign yet that escalating Middle East tensions are beginning to rattle the arteries of global energy supply. The moves come as the US joins Israel in its military campaign against Iran, raising fears of Iranian retaliation in the form of a partial or full closure of the Strait, the narrow chokepoint between Iran and Oman through which nearly 20% of the world's oil and gas shipments pass. Shipowners, energy traders, and governments are watching with growing unease as oil markets spasm and vessels stall, reroute, or anchor offshore, waiting out the storm. Tankers turn back, rates skyrocket On Sunday, the Coswisdom Lake, a Chinese-chartered Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC), made a U-turn near the strait before changing course again on Monday, resuming its route toward the UAE port of Zirku, according to data from Kpler and LSEG. The vessel was scheduled to load crude for delivery to China, chartered by Sinopec's trading arm, Unipec. The Chinese firm has not commented publicly. Another VLCC, the South Loyalty, scheduled to lift crude from Iraq's Basra terminal, also reversed course and remained outside the strait, according to LSEG and Kpler data. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 5 Books Warren Buffett Wants You to Read In 2025 Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo The rerouting isn't isolated. Over the past week, inbound empty tankers entering the Gulf have fallen 32%, and loaded departures are down 27% compared to early May levels, according to Singapore-based Sentosa Shipbrokers. Rates for VLCCs, which can carry 2 million barrels of oil, have more than doubled in the past week, crossing $60,000 per day, freight data shows. Rerouting, delays and anchored vessels More tankers are now hugging the coast of Oman or halting off ports in the UAE. MarineTraffic data shows a cluster of tankers rerouting to avoid Iranian waters, while primarily Iranian-flagged vessels remain within domestic zones. The chemical tanker Kohzan Maru was seen diverting away from the strait, lingering in the Gulf of Oman. The oil tanker Red Ruby and chemical carrier Marie C, both en route for loading, opted to anchor off Fujairah, UAE, instead of transiting the strait. "Vessels will only enter the region when it is nearer to their loading time," said KY Lin, spokesperson for Taiwan's Formosa Petrochemical Corp. The company is among many adopting a wait-and-watch stance, balancing operational deadlines with geopolitical risk. Oil prices surge, traders brace for supply snags The uncertainty pushed Brent and WTI crude to five-month highs Monday, with markets swinging on fears that any further escalation or Iranian naval retaliation could pinch already tight global supply. Analysts are now bracing for oil potentially spiking to $100 a barrel. Some Japanese shippers, including Nippon Yusen and Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, said their vessels are still transiting the strait but under strict instructions to reduce time spent inside Gulf waters. Oil traders and analysts told Reuters they have been warned to expect shipping delays as vessels cluster outside the high-risk zone, awaiting instructions or turnarounds. Iranian threats loom, but closure still unlikely — for now Iran's Press TV reported that Iran's Parliament on Sunday approved a resolution to close the Strait of Hormuz, a move that, if executed, could send shockwaves through global markets. However, such a drastic action would require approval from the country's Supreme National Security Council. While Iran has often threatened to close the Strait during periods of tension, it has never followed through. Analysts warn that even the perception of a threat is enough to unsettle trade routes and inflate freight and fuel costs.

US Urges China To Keep Iran From Shutting Strait Of Hormuz, A Key Trade Route
US Urges China To Keep Iran From Shutting Strait Of Hormuz, A Key Trade Route

NDTV

time2 hours ago

  • NDTV

US Urges China To Keep Iran From Shutting Strait Of Hormuz, A Key Trade Route

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio urged China Sunday to help deter Iran from shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial trade route, following American strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. "I encourage the Chinese government in Beijing to call them about that because they heavily depend on the Strait of Hormuz for their oil," Rubio said on Fox News. Analysts have said Iran may opt to retaliate to Washington's early Sunday attack by shutting the Strait, a waterway through which one-fifth of global oil output passes. "If they do that, it will be another terrible mistake. It's economic suicide for them if they do it, and we retain options to deal with that," Rubio added. "But other countries should be looking at that as well, it would hurt other countries' economies a lot worse than ours. It would be, I think, a massive escalation that would merit a response. Not just by us but from others," he said. Meanwhile, Iran has threatened bases used by the US military, with an advisor to Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei saying they will be considered a "legitimate target for our armed forces." However, whether the US strikes will push Tehran to de-escalate the conflict or to widen it further is yet to be known. China has joined Russia and a chorus of Arab states in condemning the US attacks, saying that they "escalate tensions in the Middle East."

US accuses Chinese AI firm DeepSeek of aiding Beijing's military and dodging chip export rules
US accuses Chinese AI firm DeepSeek of aiding Beijing's military and dodging chip export rules

Mint

time3 hours ago

  • Mint

US accuses Chinese AI firm DeepSeek of aiding Beijing's military and dodging chip export rules

The United States has accused Chinese artificial intelligence firm DeepSeek of aiding Beijing's military and intelligence services, with a senior U.S. official claiming the company has also attempted to bypass export restrictions to acquire advanced American semiconductor technology. The allegations, disclosed in an interview withReuters, mark a significant escalation in Washington's scrutiny of Chinese AI firms amid an ongoing technological rivalry and broader trade tensions between the two global powers. According to the U.S. State Department official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, DeepSeek has not only collaborated with China's military and intelligence sectors but has also tried to obtain restricted Nvidia chips through front companies based in Southeast Asia. 'DeepSeek has willingly provided and is likely to continue supporting China's military and intelligence operations,' the official stated. 'This goes well beyond simple open-source AI model access.' The Hangzhou-based startup shocked the global tech community earlier this year by claiming its AI reasoning models, DeepSeek-V3 and DeepSeek-R1, matched or exceeded those developed by U.S. giants like OpenAI and Meta, at a significantly lower cost. The company said it had spent just $5.58 million on computing power to train its models, a figure that has drawn scepticism from AI researchers who believe the actual costs were likely far higher. The U.S. official further alleged that DeepSeek is sharing user data and analytics with China's surveillance systems. While Chinese law mandates that firms must comply with government data requests, this explicit claim, if true, could raise serious privacy concerns for DeepSeek's tens of millions of daily global users. U.S. lawmakers have previously warned that DeepSeek transmits American user data through infrastructure linked to China Mobile, a state-owned telecom operator. DeepSeek has so far remained silent on questions related to its privacy policies and alleged data-sharing practices. Adding to concerns, DeepSeek has reportedly been cited over 150 times in procurement records linked to China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) and associated defence entities. The U.S. official claimed the firm has supplied technology to PLA research bodies, thoughReuters was unable to independently verify these procurement links. Despite U.S. restrictions on the export of Nvidia's high-end H100 chips to China since 2022, DeepSeek has reportedly acquired a substantial quantity of them. The U.S. official alleged that the company used shell entities in Southeast Asia to access the chips and is attempting to utilise regional data centres to remotely operate the hardware. While the official declined to confirm whether DeepSeek had successfully evaded these controls, the suggestion that one of China's most high-profile AI firms could be skirting U.S. restrictions is likely to trigger further investigations. Responding toReuters, Nvidia said it does not support any firm violating export controls or appearing on U.S. entity lists. 'With current export regulations, we are effectively excluded from the China data centre market, now served mainly by domestic players such as Huawei,' the company said. Reuters reported that DeepSeek had obtained H100 chips, others disputed the scale of its holdings. Nvidia stated its own review found DeepSeek had used H800 processors, a less powerful, export-compliant variant, rather than H100s. Earlier this year, Singaporean authorities charged three individuals with fraud in a case linked to the illicit transfer of Nvidia chips to DeepSeek. Meanwhile, Malaysian officials confirmed last week that they are investigating whether a Chinese company is using Nvidia-equipped servers in the country to train large language models, potentially in violation of domestic regulations. Despite mounting concerns, DeepSeek has not yet been added to any U.S. trade blacklist, and there is no public evidence that Nvidia knowingly facilitated any military-related work by the company. Under U.S. rules, companies must refrain from exporting advanced chips to Chinese firms that are either blacklisted or involved in the development of weapons of mass destruction. Nonetheless, the developments are likely to increase pressure on Washington to tighten its monitoring of Chinese tech firms, particularly those with potential military links. (With inputs from Reuters)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store