Director of GCHQ explained

The Director of the Government Communications Headquarters is the highest-ranking official in the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), a British intelligence agency that specialises in signals intelligence, information assurance and cryptography. The director is a Permanent Secretary, and appointed by and reports to the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.[1] [2]

Though the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom has ultimate responsibility within the British government for security matters and the intelligence agencies, the Foreign Secretary has day to day ministerial responsibility for GCHQ.[2] The Director of GCHQ is also a permanent member of the United Kingdom's National Security Council and the Cabinet Office's Joint Intelligence Committee.[2]

The role of the Director of GCHQ was outlined by the Intelligence Services Act 1994, in which the director is described as "...responsible for the efficiency of GCHQ".[3] The director's role is to ensure:

The GCHQ director has become more publicly visible in the wake of the 2013 global surveillance disclosures. Sir Arthur Bonsall, director from 1973 to 1978, was the first director to speak publicly about his career at GCHQ when he was interviewed by the BBC in September 2013,[4] and Sir Iain Lobban testified before parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee in the wake of the disclosures in November 2013.[5] The director from 1989 to 1996, Sir John Adye, had previously spoken as a witness at the inquest into the death of Diana, Princess of Wales in February 2008 to deny that GCHQ had any involvement in the tape recordings that led to the "Camillagate" or "Squidgygate" scandals.[6]

Soon after taking on the role in 2014, Robert Hannigan authored under his own name an article in the Financial Times on the topic of internet surveillance.[7] [8]

List of GCHQ directors

Image Name Term
1 1921–1939
1921–1942
Operational head
2 1942–1952
3 Sir Eric Jones1952–1960
4 1960–1964
5 1965–1973
6 1973–1978
7 1978–1983
8 1983–1989
9 1989–1996
10 1996–1997
11 1998
12 1998–2003
13 2003–2008
14 2008–2014
15 2014–2017
16 2017–2023
17 2023–present

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Permanent Secretaries . .
  2. News: Ministerial responsibility . GCHQ . 28 February 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131214160629/http://www.gchq.gov.uk/how_we_work/running_the_business/oversight/Pages/Ministerial-responsibility.aspx . 14 December 2013 .
  3. Book: Philip Jones. Public Law and Human Rights Statutes 2012–2013. 17 August 2012. Routledge. 978-0-415-63390-1. 125–.
  4. Web site: Lifting the veil of secrecy on the intelligence service . BBC News Online. 8 September 2013 . 8 September 2013 . Steve Knibbs.
  5. News: UK intelligence work defends freedom, say spy chiefs. 7 November 2014. BBC News Online. 24 October 2014.
  6. News: GCHQ 'did not tap Diana's phone'. 28 February 2014. BBC News Online. 24 October 2014.
  7. News: The web is a terrorist's command-and-control network of choice . Robert Hannigan . Financial Times . 3 November 2014 . 3 November 2014.
  8. News: Tech groups aid terror, says UK spy chief . Sam Jones and Murad Ahmed . Financial Times . 3 November 2014 . 3 November 2014.