Gerry Warner

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Person.png Gerry Warner PowerbaseRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(spook, diplomat)
Gerry Warner.jpg
BornGerald Warner
1931
Elsenham, Essex, UK
Alma materOxford University/St Peter's College
SpouseMary Warner
A former deputy director of MI6 and Co-ordinator for Intelligence and Security. No Wikipedia page as of 2020!

Employment.png Deputy Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service

In office
1990 - 1991
Was Deputy Chief for this whole time, but at some point between 1990 and February 1998. He probably left the service when he became Co-ordinator for Intelligence and Security.

Sir Gerry Warner is an MI6 officer who became Deputy Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service in the 1990s. His wife, Mary Warner, was "one of the foremost researchers in fuzzy mathematics".[1]

Official narrative

"Sir Gerald Warner (1951, History) has been elected an Honorary Fellow of St Peter's College in recognition of his outstanding career achievements.

Sir Gerald was Intelligence and Security Coordinator at the Cabinet Office and a Deputy Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, commonly known as MI6. Born at Elsenham in 1931, he attended Newburgh Priory School before coming up in Michaelmas 1951 to St Peter’s, then still known as St Peter's Hall, where he read Modern History.

Sir Gerald was recruited by the SIS upon graduation, and eventually rose to become Deputy Chief and Director of Counter-Intelligence and Security in 1988, retiring from SIS in 1990. He was subsequently appointed Intelligence and Security Coordinator at the Cabinet Office in 1991, a post which serves as a liaison between the chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC), the Permanent Under-Secretaries' Committee and the Prime Minister. He also briefly served as a member of the Police Complaints Authority.

In retirement, he has contributed to news coverage relating to the intelligence community, most notably in pieces by the BBC, including those published by Gordon Corera (1992, History), with whom he visited the college in September 2012 as part of the talk ‘The Place of Intelligence in a Democracy’"[2]

Background

Gerald Warner studied history at Oxford, graduating in 1951[2] (or possibly 1954)[1] and joined the "Diplomatic Service in the Intelligence Branch". In 1956 he married a mathematics student at Oxford, Mary Wynne Davies.[1][3]

MI6

In 1956, his job took him to China, where his first son, Sian was born and soon after he returned to London. In 1959 Jonathan was born and soon the family were off to Rangoon, Burma[4] where the third of Warner's children, Rachel, was born in 1961. In the 1960s he worked in Poland, then for two years in Geneva. His last overseas posting was from 1974-1976, in Malaysia.[1]

1980s

Warner's wife's prodigious mathematical talent began to make itself known and between 1980 and 1985 she wrote 20 papers on tolerance spaces and automata.[1] Trowbridge H Ford asserted in 2011 that Warner, together with Gordon Barrass and Harry Burke was connected to the 1986 assassination of Olof Palme.[5] Warner was MI6's Director of Counterintelligence and Security in the late 1980s.[6]

1990s

Warner was Co-ordinator for Intelligence and Security from 1991 to 1996.[7][8] When asked by Robert Fellowes "What shall I tell Her Majesty her Secret Intelligence Service is for?" Warner reportedly said "Please tell her it is the last penumbra of her Empire."[9] The BBC reports him as stating that "the main concern was always balancing the value of possible intelligence against the risk."[10]

Family Tragedy

Warner's son Jonathan and daughter Sian reportedly had mental health problems and one source suggests that they both took their own lives during the 1990s.[1] However, The Times' obituary for his wife states that in 1998 she was survived by one daughter.[11]


Exposure

Warner was named in Gordon Corera's MI6: Life and Death in the British Secret Service.[12]

Later activities

He is quoted by BBC occasionally on espionage matters, and in a 2001 story criticising the total cost of the UK's intelligence agencies, he estimated that "the total cost the UK's intelligence gathering is £2.5bn, when all military intelligence and satellite surveillance is included."[13] In 2017 he was made an honorary fellow of St. Peters College (Oxford).[2]

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References