What is it like to keep top state secrets?

2011-08-31 06:05:39

A secret world of people in the UK, many of them ordinary citizens, are living

extraordinary double lives to help the government. But what is it like to live

with the danger and loneliness involved and keep important state secrets, ask

Peter Taylor and Richard Knight.

Throughout the many violent years that led up to the Northern Ireland peace

process, Londonderry businessman Brendan Duddy and his family lived with an

extraordinary secret.

Duddy was, for decades, the secret intermediary between MI6, MI5 and the IRA.

Without him it's unlikely that Northern Ireland would be where it is today.

"It took somebody with a lot of brains," says Seanna Duddy, Brendan's daughter.

"He had what it took to go into a room, be in danger and keep his cool."

The threat to Duddy's life came not just from some members of the IRA who

suspected he might be working for MI5, but from the loyalist paramilitaries who

wanted to kill off any negotiations with the IRA - and perhaps anyone

associated with them.

So the family could not breathe a word about the meetings between British

intelligence officers and the IRA leadership that took place in the "wee room"

in their family home.

"People had absolutely no idea," says Larry Duddy, Brendan's son. "Really close

friends of my father for 50 years didn't know what he was doing.

"There's part of you wants to let the world know what your father did and

there's another part that doesn't want anyone to know. I was quite happy with

no-one knowing because it was the end result which was important."

Duddy finally did get the end result he wanted - peace in Northern Ireland. But

his children made personal sacrifices as co-inhabitants of their father's

secret world.

"When you came home from school you couldn't bring your friends home," says

Seanna. "If everybody was out playing in the gardens or the roads nearby and it

was our turn [for] our mammy to make tea, that never happened."

Attacks stopped

Most individuals who operate in the secret world do not involve their families.

Many, in fact, tell no-one about their hidden lives, not even those closest to

them.

Ali, a pseudonym, is a Muslim who was recruited by MI5 shortly after 9/11. When

he spoke to the BBC it was the first time he had discussed his work with anyone

other than his handlers at MI5.

He said he'd been able to stop some terrorist attacks but did not want to get

into "the specifics". The impulse to share his successes or failures must, he

says, be ignored.

"If you want to be able to help out doing this kind of work then you just have

to hold those feelings in, which could be challenging but you learn with time,"

he says.

Ali is proud of what he does and of what he believes he has achieved. But he

knows some in his community would regard him as a traitor and that his life as

a Covert Human Intelligence Source - CHIS - is risky.

'Quiet satisfaction'

"I think it's quite evident that if some people would find out what I'm doing

there may be people that probably would ignore it, there would be people who

would try to do something about stopping me from helping out as well," he says.

"Therefore I'm careful and my handlers are being careful as well. And I've got

my own brain... so I just have to be vigilant."

Man walking by IRA graffiti The IRA, MI5 and MI6 secretly met for years in the

Duddy home

Steve, also a pseudonym, is a former undercover Special Branch officer who

infiltrated the hard left to counter subversion. Steve adopted a cover story -

known as a "legend" - and lived it for four years. He says his work put

tremendous strain on both him and his wife, who knew his secret role.

"You're a police officer and you know your role, and you're briefed to do a

role, and then you are operating as a political activist. You're living two

lives, but you have to remember which is which."

Despite the pressures Steve says his years as an undercover officer were the

best of his service. Ali continues to face significant risks but he also says,

without hesitation, he would do it all again. The Duddy family made astonishing

sacrifices for peace. Now they are able to view the transformation of Northern

Ireland with quiet satisfaction.

Whatever you may think about the morality and ethics of those who live in the

secret world, many are remarkable men and women. They are prepared to live with

secrets, danger and loneliness, for what they believe is a greater good.