The news was first made
public in the 2015 Strategic Defence and Security Review.
It announced the planned
recruitment of 1,900 extra staff to the intelligence agencies - with MI6 to get
the bulk of that increase.
MI6 is to recruit up to
1,000 extra staff to fight the modern threats facing the UK.
The Secret Intelligence
Service has been given more money to expand its operations.
There is no detail on what
positions are being advertised, but it's thought the new personnel will be
experts in cyber, data collection, languages and foreign analysis.
It will take the size of
MI6 from about 2,500 staff to as many as 3,500 by 2020.
Although an exact number
has never been confirmed, it is understood to be accurate.
Alex Younger, the Chief of
the Secret Intelligence Service, spoke alongside his counterparts from the US,
Australia and Canada at an event in Washington DC on Wednesday.
Although he didn't speak
about the increased recruitment, he expanded on the challenges facing Western
intelligence agencies.
Mr Younger said there is a
"deepening sectarian divide in the Middle East", adding: "There
are some deep social, economic and demographic drivers to the phenomenon we
know as terrorism.
"Allied with the
emergence state failure, I think that regrettably this is an enduring
issue."
But he said friendly
intelligence agencies are working better, together, to deal with the threat of
terrorism.
The digital age has broken
down physical and geographical barriers and ideologies can spread easily
through the internet, with the cyber world acting as both a great enabler and a
great disrupter of the intelligence mission.
"I think the
information revolution fundamentally changes our operating environment,"
Mr Younger told the event.
"In five years' time,
there will be two sorts of intelligence agencies: those who understand this
fact and have prospered and those who don't and haven't.
"And I'm determined
that MI6 will be in the former category."
"C", as he his
nicknamed, also said intelligence agencies could serve as a valuable link to
traditionally hostile countries.
He explained: "We need
to find a way of messaging these countries and communicating with them.

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