London - British officials expressed 'horror' Wednesday at a
serious breach of security after top-secret intelligence dossiers on
the al-Qaeda terrorism network and the latest assessment of the
security situation in Iraq were left on a commuter train.
The documents belonged to a 'very senior intelligence official
working in the Cabinet Office,' the BBC said. They were found in an
orange envelope on a train leaving London's Waterloo Station Tuesday
and handed over to the BBC by a passenger.
Scotland Yard has launched an investigation into what was
described as a 'grave security breach.' The documents, which all had
security codings, should under no circumstances have been taken out
of government buildings.
Just seven pages long, but classified as 'UK Top Secret', the
package contained the latest government intelligence assessment on
al-Qaeda and a topical report on the military situation in Iraq.
The documents were so sensitive that each one of them was numbered
and marked 'for UK/US/Canadian and Australian eyes only', the BBC's
security correspondent Frank Gardner reported.
The Iraq report included passages which gave a 'damning'
assessment of Iraq's security forces, the BBC said.
The two reports were assessments made by the government's Joint
Intelligence Committee.
There had been expressions of 'horror' across several government
departments that top-secret documents could have been so casually
mislaid, said Gardner.
'Two documents which are marked as 'secret' were left on a train
and have subsequently been handed to the BBC. There has been a
security breach, the Metropolitan Police are carrying out an
investigation,' a spokesman for the Cabinet Office said.
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