The Intelligence Advantage

Welcome to The Intelligence Advantage podcast.

In this episode, host Gary Miller sits down with Chris Steele, founder and CEO of Orbis Business Intelligence, to explore the fascinating journey from British intelligence officer to high-profile investigator. Chris Steele shares formative experiences from his early days in the Foreign Office, his time in Moscow during the dramatic collapse of the Soviet Union, and insights into how cross-cultural trust and relationship-building shape the work of intelligence professionals.

The conversation dives into highlights from Chris Steele’s career, including the transition to the private sector, the challenges of modern lawfare, and his unique perspective on democracy’s fragility in today’s world. With anecdotes ranging from life-changing events in Russia to headline-making investigations in the US, Chris Steele offers honest reflections on personal challenges, public scrutiny, and the ever-evolving world of intelligence and investigation.

Timestamps:
00:00:00 Introduction
00:09:55 Cambridge Experience and Personal Growth
00:15:36 Freedom, Society, and Perspective
00:17:04 Democracy's Global Decline
00:25:57 Diplomat's Insights on Soviet Russia
00:29:51 Bizarre Day After Moscow Coup
00:35:37 Rigorous Intelligence Training Described
00:43:13 How Rigorous Are Intelligence Services?
00:47:56 Intelligence Practices and Private Sector
00:51:49 Focus on Russia, Not America
00:58:49 Embracing Media for Geopolitical Debate
01:00:20 Legal Tactics Silencing Critics
01:05:44 Public Figure Defamation Standards

If you’re curious about covert operations, real-life spy stories, and what it takes to safeguard democracy, this episode is not to be missed! Don’t forget to subscribe to the Intelligence Advantage podcast for more fascinating discussions with industry leaders and to stay updated on future episodes!

Video Production & Editing: PodLab
https://www.podlab.agency/

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What is The Intelligence Advantage ?

An insight into the character, personality and passion of the leading figures in the Investigation and Intelligence industry who have shaped the way we gather, analyse and utilise information and intelligence.

The fundamental skill in an intelligence officer, and I would argue to

some extent a diplomat as well, is the ability to engender

trust. It's the ability to build strong cross cultural

relationships of understanding motivation behind people in other

countries and cultures and to harness that, really.

Democracy is a precious and quite fragile creature

and we've seen in the US how vulnerable. Even the country

which we were all taught at university had the strongest checks and

balances and the strongest constitution is being subverted very

quickly by an authoritarian who is not a democrat and

doesn't believe in the rule of law. So on the Sunday up until about 3

o', clock, we were under surveillance. Then suddenly the surveillance disappeared,

which is extremely odd. So we knew that evening that

something strange was happening around us. We weren't sure what it was.

And then of course, it became clear the next morning that

a coup attempt had happened.

Hello and welcome to the Intelligence Advantage podcast where we talk

to the movers and shapers in the investigation and intelligence

space. My name is Gary Miller, I've been an investigative

lawyer for nearly half a century and I'm also the chairman of the

IfG, a network of international investigative and

asset recovery lawyers. I'm absolutely delighted to

welcome Chris Steele, the founder and CEO of

Orbis Business Intelligence and a good friend

and somebody that I have worked with in the past and

somebody who in a period of 20 odd years

has really created more case studies, real

life cases and excitement and adventure than

almost any other investigator and may I

say, ex spook, has been able to achieve. So

welcome Chris. It's really cool to have you on board.

Thank you for having me, Gary. Pleasure to be here. Now, you won't be

surprised, Chris, that I did a bit of homework and you were kind enough

to send me your latest book, redacted. And

what I did, because I'm also trying my best

to get to terms with modern technology such as ChatGPT.

I fed in a few bits and pieces about

yourself and I said, look, could you present me with a,

not a detail, but a reasonable chronology of

Chris Steele and the cases with references and

my friend, this is what you produce. So you

definitely have got your own little stake

in the history of the investigation and intelligence space and

hopefully we'll get a chance to talk about some of it. I fully appreciate

that there may be questions I ask you that you'll say pass and I will

gently move over to something else. But you are, as I said at

the beginning when I welcomed you, you really have left us, led

and are leading a surreal life I mean, there are not many people

who firstly, who have transitioned

from intelligence into investigation and

made such an impact on the world political stage.

So do you sometimes wake up in the morning and look in the mirror

in the bathroom and think, wtf?

What on earth have I done? Yeah. I mean, some of

it obviously was by design and a lot of it wasn't. A lot of it

is the law of unintended consequences. I mean, my whole career, in

a sense, from the time that I joined the

Foreign Office and the Intelligence Service to the time

I served in Russia, when Russia, Soviet Union, in fact, to begin with,

before it became Russia, started to collapse when I was there.

So there's been a. Nothing to do with your arrival, Chris, I

hope. No, I wanted a quiet life and certainly didn't get

it and never have done since. But, no, there is

a sense, I think about me, that there's a sort of element of

fate involved in all this and that I just happen

to end up in the right place at the right time, or you could argue

the wrong place at the wrong time, but certainly that's the feeling. And I don't

think it's played out entirely yet, either. I don't think so either. And

certainly your book and the material that is referred to

comprehensively in it would certainly lead us to believe,

and current political conditions, that you are far from having played

out your role in this

physical world that you and I currently belong to.

So I want to. I've got so many questions

to ask, but the first one is when, at what stage in your life, was

it when you went to. To Cambridge? Cambridge or Oxford?

Yeah. Did you actually think, you know what, I'm going to

become a spy? The answer is never,

because when I was there, I was obviously reading Social and Political

Sciences as a degree, but it. And I'd lived abroad, so in

a sense I was interested in foreign travel and foreign cultures, but at

no point at university did I think that I would end up as an intelligence

officer. In fact, I was looking at becoming either a journalist or a

lawyer, can you believe? Rather glad that I didn't take

any of those turns, but I could have done. And so it's all

a slightly sort of haphazard way in. And after

I'd graduated, I applied, as I said in my book,

in what was called a disguised advert in those days. So a

real headhunter, advertising jobs abroad, getting

in CVs through the newspaper. Does that still happen, Chris? Or not?

I don't know. It wasn't particularly cost effective.

I tell that only two people were recruited that way, me and somebody else who

remained nameless, of course, who was a peer of mine,

and the operation wasn't seen as a particularly

successful one. Well, a lot of

us, even of my tender

generation, seem to be. I have the impression that the

minute you go to Oxbridge and you're doing something to do

with political science, that it will only be a matter of

time before someone taps you on the shoulder and says, would you

like to come for an interview? And from what you've said,

that didn't happen to you, but did you get the impression that

it was, I say, a breeding ground, it was a fertile

ground for people that would be recruited by the intelligence services?

Yeah. I mean, without sort of naming names or giving numbers?

Certainly when I joined back in 1987, you know,

a substantial proportion of the people on the new entry

courses, in fact, for both Foreign Office and sis, were

Oxbridge graduates. And I'm sure there is a good

reason, and that's why every student that starts off on

their education course in one shape or form thinks

about, even if they don't really want to go to Oxford and Cambridge. But I

just think it's a little bit discriminatory, I think. What about the lse? What about

King's College? Chris, why do the intelligence services

not look there? Is it because the politics course, by definition, is

so damn good at Oxbridge? No, I don't think so.

And I think it's probably changed to some degree actually in

the modern times. And I mean, I think two of the last three

chiefs of SIS have been non Oxbridge, for example. So

I think it is changing. And my own stepdaughter

went to King, certainly for Masters, and then got recruited into the Foreign Office.

So I think that, you know, changing with the times, maybe

it's because people in Oxbridge, back in the day,

there was something about the culture there that was encouraged, self confidence

and things like that, and are being able to present in an

articulate way. And I think those things count when

you're going for interviews for hard jobs, competitive jobs, for sure.

And thinking about that, both personality

profile and skill set,

how much has changed from

25, 30 years ago when you would have

started your journey and do you think now, and I

know you're not directly involved in the

intelligence field, but what's your sense of how training and

personalities have changed? Yeah,

I think the fundamental skills are the same and they're perhaps not the skills that

people would imagine. They are the fundamental skill in an

intelligence officer. And I would argue to some extent a diplomat as well

is the ability to engender trust. It's the ability to build strong

cross cultural relationships of understanding motivation behind people

in other countries and cultures and to harness

that really to support our own country and

its objectives. And I don't think those things fundamentally change. We

refer to something called instrumental relations. Building instrumental relations.

It's not just about building any relations, it's about building relations

that produce results. And that's what is the core

skill, I think, of an intelligence officer and. I guess bearing in

mind relating it back to what are meaningful

relationships is the added advantage of

Oxbridge is that the sons, daughters

of and Future Prime Ministers, etc.

Are often sent there for some period or another. So

it's an obvious place where somebody could

say, oh yes, I was at college for example. You were at

Cambridge with Boris Johnson, were you not? He was at Oxford actually.

Oxford. But, but I, but I was certainly at Cambridge with

the sons and daughters of very significant foreign public

figures. I mean, I remember the daughter of the Chief justice of Pakistan

was in one of my classes, for example. So yeah, I mean

I, I, I, I think it's more, that's more to do with, as I said,

cross cultural understanding and self confidence and

being able to present well. I think the other thing at, at Cambridge probably is

the tutorial system which you maybe, you know,

you have a far sort of greater

personal focus on you as a presenter, as a,

be able to argue your critical thinking and so on is

tested I think a lot more in a smaller group

than it is at other universities and that's the luxury really of what was

called a tutorial system. So I think those things, it's not so much

that, you know, my father was anything significant. My father was a great

guy but he wasn't somebody who was high ranking or high

prestige or high status. That wasn't really what did it, it was more,

I think the culture around the university and around the

tutorial system and the union and other things which, which

developed me perhaps as, as a, as a

wider package of skills than, than other people at that age.

And when you were sitting down with your mom

and dad after you'd done your O levels and were

doing your A's and did you focus particularly

on Oxbridge and did your dad go there or not?

No, no, my dad didn't go to university. I mean my father

did get a degree in the end, but he went as an extra

mural student in fact to one of the, I think it was King's London

again. He was a scientist, so he wasn't even in the same field as

me. So yeah, I mean they didn't,

they weren't kind of. I wasn't following in anyone's footsteps. Although I would

say the fact that I'd lived abroad and in foreign communities did

help a lot and had shown in a sense that I could adapt to living

in foreign countries and foreign cultures. And

Aiden was where. Am I right that you were born in Aiden or not?

Yes, yes. So that was because dad was working over there

at the time, is that it? Yeah, my dad was a meteorologist,

so he, he worked with the air force a lot and that's what he

worked and that's why he was in Aden and that's why he was in Cyprus

later. So yes, quite a lot of integration into

more of an armed forces community than a diplomatic community. But certainly that

was part of my upbringing. So did you. My wife

happens to be the daughter. Sadly he's now

passed of a teacher at British military schools and was in Cyprus, in

Frankfurt, wherever. So were you also an

army brat? Did you go to those schools when you were out in Aden?

Because wasn't much of an international school

structure, was there? No. In Aidan I would have been too young, but certainly

I went. Yeah, I went to the forces school in Cyprus for three years. I

was 14 to 17 years old. And although it was a

forces school, it did have quite a lot of civilians in it and it did

have some locally sort of based

people, including Greek Cypriot. So it was an English speaking school, but it

was, it was more cosmopolitan than most schools would be. Right.

And did your dad have any ranking in the forces or not?

He just worked. Yes, he would have been, he would have been a middle ranking

officer or something like that, but he didn't. He had

the equivalent, but he wasn't actually in uniform. Right. And

either of your folks still around, Chris? Yeah, my mother's still

alive. In fact she turned 86 last week

seven years ago. Wow, okay,

so he wouldn't have been that old when he passed

83. Oh, okay, not bad.

Four score years. Not plus 10, but four score years. Not bad.

And did you, it's. Did you pick up a sense

of nationalism and pride

for and about your country because of that

sort of rubbing shoulders with the armed forces, etc?

I think so. I mean I, I don't think nationalism is

something that I would associate myself with, but patriotism and

patriotism. Sorry, that's what I meant. Well, there is a difference and the two. Yes,

absolutely. But they're not the same and, but I also think

public service in particular was something that's been ingrained in us

growing up and my sister, for example, was a consultant in the

nhs, went on to become that and I, I joined the Crown

Service, civil service. So definitely was that element to, to. The family

and wind the take forward. And

tell me to what extent your patriotic feelings have

changed over the years, if at

all. Yeah, I think they have evolved. I mean, I think what I am

very conscious of having lived in different parts of the world and,

and seen the world how it really is rather than how people think it is.

You get the sense, and particularly at the moment, actually we come on to

this, that we are quite an unusual society. You know,

the fact that we have these freedoms, that we have this strong civil

society, that we have laws to protect us and so on,

that is not the norm in many countries of the world and in some of

the countries I've served and visited and therefore I do get

a sense of, you know, how special it is to live

in a functioning democracy. Yeah, it is

very special. And that's a really interesting thought. And

we're going to talk quite a bit, I hope, because we could spend about eight

hours. I know I could. But you couldn't. Talking about many of the,

the interesting scrapes that you have got in

and are still in, in terms of. I

spent 13 years in Asia and I still travel all

over Southeast Asia, et cetera.

And until you mentioned that, made that comment, I didn't actually

think about how I naturally,

I naturally included, or would have mentally included

America and the uk. When you would talk about

how lucky we are to be in that kind of society

and what a surprise in the last,

certainly in the last year or so you realize

how politically and freedom of speech

and power related issues, how different we are

and how the UK looks like. It is not that

Europe is in a state of anarchy. Of course it's not. But when you go

to Spain, when you go to Greece, you understand because of its political

culture and its background that it doesn't have

the built in protections or at least the freedom that we have. So

we're becoming by definition in the UK

the kind of almost the last man standing.

Yeah, I think democracies have always been the

minority of countries and I certainly think democracy, and

it's been well proven, has been pushed back a lot in the Last sort of

10, 15 years. Quite a lot of countries.

I mean, Russia being the classic case of a country that was a messy

Democracy in the 1990s has reverted to full on

dictatorship. And I think other countries that were emerging, even arguably

China, of course, in 1989 and the evolution of that,

that process. So I think that we are living in a difficult

time for democracy and a difficult time for those of us who believe

in, you know, the liberal international order and civil rights and things like

that, human rights even. And

that's partly why I'm still in the game. You know, I feel that people that

know the world and know what's going on in the world and have means of

finding out what's happening in these countries need to step up to the

plate, they need to be working on it. And that's also

interesting, comes out big time from reading your book, that

you almost, not almost, you feel you have a duty, a responsibility,

a social, civic duty to call people

to account, particularly when

there is such a perceived and actual abuse of

power. Yeah, absolutely. As I say, I think that

democracy is a precious and quite fragile creature.

And we've seen in the US how vulnerable. Even the country which

we were all taught at university had the strongest checks and

balances and the strongest constitution is being subverted very

quickly by an authoritarian who is not a democrat and

doesn't believe in the rule of law. You're not a democrat if you only support

elections or believe in elections when you win some them in the same way that

you don't believe in the rule of law, as I'm sure you know, if you

only support the rule of law when you win. So. So those are

issues that are massive ones. And the risk is of contamination,

I think in the UK from what's happening in America.

Indeed. And going back to

your choice of environment

and language, I do remember from your book that

there was a possibility was there of you learning Mandarin

instead of Russia. And that

decision was made because of what

I think you did say in the book. But I think there were two factors.

One, that although I had a high score on the language aptitude

test, I wasn't a linguist and I understood

that Chinese was an incredibly hard language to learn, which it is, obviously I think

you've got to be able to recognize 5000 characters to

read a newspaper, for example. And the other thing

was that at that time, with the Soviet Union there, particularly on the intelligence side,

I mean to some extent on the diplomatic side as well. But I would say

particularly on the intelligence side, Soviet or

Russian work was the sort of haute de gam. It

was what everyone aspired to be able to do. It was

not the Premier League it was the Champions League of intelligence work.

And so in a sense it was natural that I would want to go in

that direction. And was it fiercely competitive? I mean,

when you started to make your presence

felt in that space, did you have to compete with others who

wanted to be where it's all happening, which was the Soviet Union at that

stage? Yeah, I don't know. I'd put it as strongly as saying

competing. It was very hard work. It was very demanding work, particularly for

a young man. I mean, I'm astonished now looking back on it, that I was

25, I think, when I first went to Moscow, which was pretty

incredible, same age as my youngest daughter now.

It was, yeah, I would say it's almost more collegiate.

I don't think there were big personalities and some big

egos involved, but I think there's still a huge amount of

camaraderie. I mean, I had a meeting last week with a

87 year old former colleague who was a bit of a mentor to me at

the time. And I won't go into what he did, but did some fairly

astonishing things on the Russian and Soviet side

of the house and, you know, as warm and as,

as absorbing as ever all these years later. Well, I, I

was going to ask you at some stage to name at least one

big personality or mentor in your life. I don't know

whether you're able to or willing to, but find somebody that

is not going to get both of us and them into trouble. By telling,

by telling. Is it that apart from your dad, who I assume

had a great impact on you, is there someone else along the way? Yeah,

there's many. Some of them, as I say, have to remain nameless, unfortunately. But there

were people at university, people that taught me

at university and there are people I've worked with since. You

know someone like Sir Andrew Wood, for example, if you know him. I don't

personally, but he was ambassador in Russia after I'd been there. But

I've since over many years built a very strong relationship with

him and he supported us actually through the sort of

the turbulence of 2016, 17, which is a

hallmark of really good people in my view. A lot of people

deserted us, weren't there for us, run away. He

stood firmly with us despite in fact being discouraged from doing so.

I understand and that is something that I will always be

grateful for. And he also appeared

as a defense witness for us in court. You know, she didn't have to do.

And he's like 80 plus, so a huge amount of respect

to him. He was also an excellent Russianist and ambassador.

And your Russian today is a bit

rustier by definition because you're not speaking, but you can pick up a

Russian newspaper and read it without a problem or what? Yeah, yeah. I mean,

it's muscle memory. So, yeah, I can read pretty fluently. I

can understand pretty fluently. Active use is more

difficult, as you know, but it wouldn't take me a long time

to get back into it in that sense. And I still do use it,

but obviously it's just not as fluent actively as it used to

be. I think like anything else in life, in

order to be good at something, you've got to be practicing it all the time.

You know, you can't be a good golfer unless you're playing at least once a

week. You can't speak good Russian unless you're speaking it, you know, for a couple

of hours a week minimum. But it's all there. It's muscle memory.

And tell us a little bit if you can, about

what, 25 years old, you

fly BA or Aeroflot or something into

Moscow. BA into Moscow. You get off the

plane and you look around you and you think, what on

earth have I done? Or are you as excited as you've ever been

in, or at least the beginning of that journey of being

supercharged? Yeah, I mean, you can see from the

book and from what you know of me that I'm a risk taker and I

like doing things that have impact and I like doing things that are difficult.

So for me it was just what I'd been prepared for.

I've been fully prepared for it as far as it was possible.

And it was. It was a professional. It was, as I say, it's like

being a sportsman and running on in your first Champions League game.

That's what it's like. It is daunting in a way, but if you're focused

and professional and you get on with it, you can achieve amazing results. And

that's hopefully what we did. So by comparison,

I'm trying to think where I was at 25.

Funny enough, I'd already got to Hong Kong. But

just trying to think of me at

a similar age. I. E. My first job as a then

article Clark. So I go into the office, I sit down and I wait

for somebody to give me something to do. And

I am, you know, looking at tons of

papers. What is the life of a 25 year old?

I know you were assigned to the embassy. It wasn't until

sometime later that somehow, which we might get on to that

you're. Your participation in the intelligence

services became aware. So subject to the, the

so called, not the un,

the not so secret

secret that everyone that goes to an embassy in a foreign

country must be doing some kind of spying which may or may not

be true. I don't know, you're shaking your head. There's got to be some legitimate

ambassadorial activity going on. But what did life

actually look like? Was it a 9 to 5? You went into

the embassy, you look at the newspapers, just give me a

taste of life as a junior operative.

Well, you had your day job as a diplomat, which was very important

and in fact was, as I've said many times, I think I

learned more about the Soviet Union, Russia from my day job than I did from

other responsibilities, should we say, that I might have had had there.

And that was very important. And what did that comprise

of? It comprises of what you made of it. And of course in those days

it was kind of a slightly Wild east flavor to it. We had an

embassy which was understaffed, under skilled,

under represented really, given the momentous things

that were coming. I mean we had, we only had

10 or 12 fluent Russian speakers in the whole embassy at that point.

And suddenly the world turned on us in terms of its attention and

its focus. And so it was a very challenging. I mean the day

job was a full time job. I mean I can

remember traveling inside the country, for example,

reporting back from the provinces, which was all very

trailblazing. The day job was very exciting.

The other responsibilities I have were of a different order, of course,

but I'm not really allowed to talk about. No, of course not.

And of course as you're there, you were there for how many

years in Moscow? Three years. And what was the most significant

change in either relationship with the world,

with the UK that you witnessed and the impact on you while you were

there? Well, literally the country became a different country.

So it's hard to beat that. Your timing was

immaculate, right? Well, yeah, exactly. I went there, I was

accredited to the Soviet Union when I arrived

and when I left I was accredited to the Russian Federation and the Russian

Russian Federal Federation, as it was called. So we

went through a period about almost halfway through the posting actually,

where we didn't really know which country we're accredited to or whether we had

full diplomatic immunity. So that has to be the biggest change when you're actually

in a country which is completely

transformed effectively geographically and everything else legally.

But I think probably the tipping point was, as you all know,

the attempted coup attempt in 1991, where I

was in situ. A lot of diplomats, it was in August, were on holiday

abroad and either missed it or didn't get back in time or

whatever. We were right in the thick of it. And of course I've said to

you, understaffed really. And in particular during that

period when we had the world's attention on us, the

government's attention on us. So as a 25 year old,

I was probably carrying responsibility on the ground of a 40

year old. So it was. We would call, I was a second

secretary and I was operating like a counsellor. So I

think that's an insight into how much that

impacted on me and was part of my formative professional development.

And it was a case of having to have the

determination and the backbone and the adaptability to just go

about the business and do it as you saw fit and not worry too

much about the consequences if you got it slightly wrong.

And is there one day going back to that time with the

assassination tent, can you that you can talk us through just in how

it impacted you. You woke up one morning and someone told you the X?

Well, yeah, I mean, I woke up one morning and a wife came in and

said, you know, there's been a coup. And

interestingly, the day before we had been under

surveillance, as we often were, until about

3 o' clock in the afternoon. That was a Sunday. The coup happened on a

Monday morning. So on the Sunday up until about 3 o' clock, we were under

surveillance. And then suddenly the surveillance disappeared, which is

extremely odd. So we knew that evening that something strange

was happening around us. We weren't sure what it was. And then of

course it became clear the next morning that

a coup attempt had happened. I think probably that

wasn't the most formative day, the most impressionable day, I think

was probably the day when John

Major and Douglas heard, and this is again is in my book, as you'll have

seen, came as the first foreign dignitaries after the coup had been

defeated to visit Moscow and I was responsible

for their program or parts of their program was

as a 27 year old accompanying a Prime Minister into the Kremlin

St. Catherine's hall was. I mean, it is

surreal actually. And in fact, I think I say in the

book that John Major asked to borrow my comb as he

was combing his hair in the sort of the

Romanov vestibule with the

Romanov mirrors and everything else that none of us had ever seen before,

you know, so it was. That was probably the most bizarre

day. And also because My parents were

in Moscow on that day. Wow. I recount,

I actually recount in the book a very amusing instant

where Major and Heard went for a walkabout and

of course, hoping to meet Russians and talk to Russians. And

first person they spoke to the walkabout was my father,

who they observed, spoke very good English. And he said, yes,

Prime Minister, it's because I'm from Wokingham. Then about.

It was quite clear that John Major dined out on this story because there

was a. There was a documentary about the Queen about two years later

on television and it has, you know, coverage of Major going

out to Balmoral after he'd been to Moscow. And,

you know, he sits down with the Queen and the first thing he says to

her, she says, how did the trip to Moscow go? And he said, so it

was incredible. Only that on the walkabout the first person I met was from

Wokingham. So he was obviously dining out on this.

Absolutely. And I'm sure, and I'm sure that comb

you should have kept. I hope you kept the comb. It was probably worth five

grand. Now, Chris, part of history

now. And incidentally, the other thing that happened that day. Yes.

On the sort of more on the intelligent side, something I can talk about was

that Gordievsky, who'd been his defector

from the KGB to the UK and his wife had been trapped

back at home, was actually released at that point and

was able to come to the embassy, meet the Prime Minister and then get on

his plane going back to UK to be reunited with her husband. So that was

also, you know, a major development that happened on that. That very same day.

Yeah, pretty dramatic stuff. And how long after that did you,

did you leave? Well, it was pretty much halfway through

my posting. So the coup was around August

91st. So, yeah, that was about 18 months into my posting and then

I left about 18 months later. And.

If you are allowed to talk about it, the reason for leaving or is that

a three year period is about. Yeah, I'd completed my

posting without being declared person or grantor or

expelled. So that was good as well. That was. That's a

tick in the right box, I imagine. And now when you

look at the UK or England, rather.

Incidentally, Gary, which is nipoiman nivor, which means

if you're not caught, you're not a thief, you're not a thief. Yeah,

I'm sure there's a few Yiddish and other Lithuanian and

Romanian phrases that are similar.

So now when you look at the British presence in

Moscow, it is a It must be, I

think, much larger than it was when you were there, but has shrunk

since again because of the sanctions and the war and stuff like that.

It's moribund embassy. I mean, it's an embassy under siege, which does

no serious work. And that's very sad. I think.

It's obviously everything that's happened to Russia since

2000 is, is sad and is regrettable.

And I think one of the elements that is very

depressing is the way in which, you know, the bilateral relationship

between Britain and Russia is so bad now. It's worse now than it was in

Soviet times. And, and that is, you know, a lot of it, of course,

is, is Putin's fault and done by design,

but it's still tragic for everyone involved. So

there's nothing more than a skeleton staff left in or base

there? Yeah, it's smaller than it was when I was there. I mean, it kind

of was smaller than. It grew bigger and then it grew smaller anyway

because Russia was sort of slightly downgraded as a post probably

about 15 years ago, but then more of late. It's just

there's not a lot of point in having a top end sort of

skill set of staff there because they're not doing anything. They can't do it.

So a lot of them are in Kiev, obviously in other places now. Yes, I

get it. Okay. So coming back to

training, I have this

vision of at some stage during your

joining the Foreign Office,

that you're taken out for a wonderful dinner

and wined and dined, and as you come out, you're bundled into

the back of a van and, and you are waterboarded until

you reveal everything that you had for dinner that evening, plus

a few secrets. It's not like that.

Your training, how do you, how do they ensure that you are

resilient and tough and that you won't give away the

crown jewels? Chris? Well, I think it is pretty tough, actually. I

mean, the sort of scenario you're depicting there isn't a billion

miles from the truth. And, you know, again,

some of this has all has actually been set out.

The new entry course was described by somebody called Richard Tomlinson in a book

he wrote, which I didn't approve of, but it nevertheless is out

there in the public, public sphere. And yes, you know, you

don't get let loose in these kind of jobs unless you're

thoroughly trained and tested in them to

a very significant degree. And, you know,

I think both the Foreign Office and the intelligence

services used to front load a lot of their Training for that reason

and only if you got through where you then sort of let

loose on the real world and quite a few people didn't go

through. I can imagine. And

looking at the world of Hollywood, I

don't know, are you, are you an aficionado of

spy films or do you stay well away from all of that stuff because

it's so far removed from reality? Well,

again with literature. So you've got spy literature and you've got attached that,

you know, drama and television and, and film.

I mean I, I, I love spy novels. I think there are some very good

ones around at the moment. There are, there are two particular authors around at the

moment who I think are very good. One's

British guy called Charles Beaumont, who is somebody I know personally

has written two spy novels. And then there's an

American guy who's written I think three now, an

ex CIA officer and what's his name? I'm just trying to remember his

name. Okay, but he's written in the Seventh Floor was the most recent one, and

then Damascus Station and so on. And he's actually on a podcast with

Gordon Carrera these days. The

rest is secret or something like that anyway that

people will find it. Right. So, so yeah, I like, I

like, I think Le Carre was a genius. So I think there's been a lot

of good spy literature. I think that the, what you

see, some of the drama you see is not at all accurate.

And I'm just watching this latest one with Saran Jones,

who I think is a very good actress. But I think the,

the, the screenplay is, is just so

ridiculous that I can't take it seriously and we've stopped

watching it. So I think, I think there's a lot of bad spy dramas on,

on television and film. So if you had to pick one that you thought

was as authentic as, as close

as authentic as it can get, what would come to mind in terms of spy

movie or spy series? Well, I think some of them are carry stuff

probably and you know, Tinker Taylor, Soldiers by and

Smiley's people were works of genius in my view. I think the

Perfect Spy is also an excellent novel

and they've all been turned into, you know, as you know,

films or TV series with Alec Guinness in particular

being a genius really in that part of Smiley, George Smiley.

So I think that's where I'd go to. I think as I say, some of

the things I've seen recently, recently on, on television are really just

so ridiculously off, off beam that, you know, you can't you can't

take it seriously and. You can't talk to an ex

intelligence officer without mentioning slow horses.

Yes. Did you ever watch it? Interesting. I've read

the book, but I. I read the Slow Horses, but I haven't seen the TV

series. I'm. I'm broadly aware of what. Sorry, I've got a.

This is the ecology side of the coming out. Excellent.

Yeah. If I don't move, the lights go off.

It's probably a metaphor for my life, actually.

So. So, yes, I'm aware of that. And obviously

that's a very popular drama, quite a powerful drama, but it's

not particularly realistic. I mean, there are. There are obviously parts. There are elements

in the security services where, you know,

it's termed the knacker's yard or it's the duffers or it's the slow, slow

coaches. But to have them all lumped together, I think would be

very dangerous, actually.

You're absolutely right. So you leave Moscow,

you go to Paris. Life is. Is

almost a.

A dream come true when you get to Paris, after all of the.

The hustle and bustle of Russia. Was

it a stimulating post for you, being in France, being in

Paris? Yeah, it was. I mean, it's an important post. There's a lot going on

there at the time. I talk about it in the book, Le

Pen's first success in getting to the second round of the

presidential election. Towards the end of my time there, for example, launching

of the euro and various wars that were going on. So

the cost of a war initially and Serbia and so on. And then finally, of

course, 9, 11, and the aftermath of that. And in fact, there'd been

a plot to do something pretty drastic in Paris just

before that that was uncovered involving Al Qaeda. So,

yeah, it was quite a challenging post. I mean,

the work is what you make it and of course,

doing what you need to do is difficult. To do it well, it's hard, it's

very challenging to get sources on board and things like that from some of these

other countries. And it wasn't helped by the fact that I think

about a year into my posting, as I mentioned the book, I was named in

a list that was. Oh, that's right, it was while you were there. Yeah. On

the Internet, which wasn't at all helpful. How does that happen?

Well, I've got to be careful what I say here. But the assumption at the

time was certainly that a former officer, rogue officer, had

collated that list and. And put it out there. Wow.

Who has since been at least Pointed to

or it's up to everyone else to make that. Yes, no, it's

sort of understood who that might have been. And that person, I don't believe has

ever come back to the uk. So, you know, there we are, right?

Yes, there is, There are certain kinds of leaks that you

feel are in the interests of, of society and

others that you think, hold on a minute, what's the, what was the,

what was the objective of doing that, do you think? Money. Purely and

simply personal vengeance money. I mean, again, you

know, when you look at all the motivation, these things, you have to be highly

motivated to do something which is effectively seriously

criminal like that, from our sort of background

and to know that you're doing immense damage to people that you,

you really have no reason, if you don't like the

establishment or the organization to take it

out on the careers of individuals and risk their physical

safety. Indeed. And

whilst you were in one or other of

the posts, did you ever have any reason to suspect that you may

have had a mole in the House or

are you unable to answer that one? Yeah, it's not a good one

to be drawn into, but I think I was always,

personally I was always satisfied the people I was working with were

loyal and honest and

reliable. And how rigorous, you would hope

very. How rigorous is the

service in terms of, you know, you get the

impression, again, you can't believe virtually anything you see on TV that

people just carry on. And let's be honest, we had quite a few

very high ranking

spies within, moles within the intelligence service.

How rigorous are the intelligence services in terms of

just keeping people and making sure that they're checking up

on them, on some of their behavior, on their expenditure. I

don't know, stuff like that. That would come second nature

to me if someone said to me, look, we've got people dealing with the,

you know, the special source of baked beans. Okay, well

then we need to make sure that. And they have to understand they're constantly

under some kind of observation.

Yeah, I mean, I think you learn from your mistakes, don't you, as an

organization or as a culture. And certainly the Cambridge Five,

as they were called, and they were a mixed bunch, actually. They weren't.

Some of them were sis, some of them were Foreign Office, one was Security Service,

one was Treasury. So they were real kind of mixed bunch.

So it was difficult to make sweeping statements. They

existed in a cultural time when they believed, wrongly

that the Soviet Union was the bulwark against

Nazi fascism and

elements of the British establishment and they're probably right about this at least,

were in cahoots with and supportive of the sort of

Mosleyites and the Nazis and alliance with Germany

against Bolshevism. But I think you still learn that

actually in many cases, it's not really ideology

that drives traitors, it's

egotism, it's narcissism, it's greed,

it's vengeance. It's a cocktail of those things.

It's not ideology. And having seen

so many of these cases play out of one sort or another over the years,

you know where the warning signs are. And I think that the vetting

structures of the security services and the Foreign Office

have to be pretty clear about that. And they are. They study these

things psychologically. They have sort of scientific,

as far as you can, warning signals and frameworks to

look at people in terms of vetting. And that's very important. So

you would expect psychological profiling on a regular basis

and being talked to and etc.

And you would expect to be re vetted every five years. And you would

expect, yes, I mean, not necessarily

to be polygraphed or anything like that, but you would certainly expect it to be

a rigorous check on everything you were doing.

It's intrusive, but you accept that as part of the job. You have to accept

that they have the right to be intrusive into your private life because

it's necessary. And of course you accept by

definition that there's not just one gang, maybe

a whole gang of people like you who are doing

their best to either recruit you or to get into your

life and find your vulnerabilities. So again, I may be

becoming too Hollywoodish, but every

intelligence service seems, on the face of it, to be at

least willing to exploit weaknesses in even friendly

intelligence services. Yeah, I think there are different sort of

carrots and sticks as to how this is done. And I think that we always

believe that carrots and trust and all those, the soft

skills were always the most important in getting the good source at. But

other services don't behave like that. Even some services in

supposedly democratic countries don't behave like that.

And so, yeah, of course, you know, hopefully I never

exhibited vulnerable traits that

attracted sufficient attention to lead anyone to

mount an operation like that against me. But certainly I'd heard of

things that went on and, you know, counteroffers that were made and things like that,

certainly part of the, of the ecosystem.

And yeah, you had to be 100% reliable

and have really good judgment. And

now who would not that you've been trained by Each of them. But on

the face of it, who would you say has got the finest

bunch of intelligence, trained intelligence agents in

the world? Is there a standout? Everyone refers to the Mossad. Is it

the Mossad or they're a group of them? I don't think it's the Mossad.

Mossad have too much

of the stick as well as the carrot, I believe. I mean, I think

culturally the British have been very good at intelligence work. I mean, one of the

points I was going to make actually is that I think what's new about the

current scenario internationally is

that the private sector, the ex officers have gone into the private

sector, are very potent and able

and possibly produce better intelligence in

many ways than people still in government. And I think that's an

issue that needs to be properly managed and debated.

But I think culturally certainly. Do you attract,

does an intelligence service, does a diplomatic service attract the

best graduates, the most talented people? I think traditionally in this

country we have. I'm not so sure it's the case anymore,

and that's open for debate, but I think that a lot of other

countries, like even the us, France,

Germany, Israel, are not really as good at doing what I

would call deep cultivation and recruitment as we are.

And just to reinforce it in my mind

and hopefully some of the people listening, it's all about

relationships, right? It's all about building that trust

and that understanding, knowing what their habits are,

them trusting you and you being consistent. So that's

at the core of, I guess it's the core of everything in life, but in,

in the tradecraft, it's everything.

Well, the case officer relationship with the recruiter is the key

relationship and it's the one that everyone should really, you

know, uses the default for assessing someone and

understanding someone. And if you move away from that and you have

people that standing back reading files or bureaucrats or lawyers

telling you what they think is going on and they prevail, you've got a problem.

And that's one of the things I think that did happen during the Iraq,

the run up to the Iraq War. But that's quite a sensitive area.

And were you in the services? My history, as you can tell, is rubbish.

You were still in the intelligence service at the time. Yeah, that was

an interesting time. So I can see time is running away with

us. And of course I haven't even got to the. The most sensational,

in a way, part of your career so far, you leave the

service, you immediately create orbis or you

have a year off and, and, and sail around the world to

get your sanity back? No, we. We pretty much set

up straight away. I mean, we'd been planning it for a year or 18 months

beforehand. So we were, we. We

transitioned to. Into a bit. That last summer when we were still

on the government's payroll, we. We were given some leeway to.

To prepare ourselves. We were kind of working part time, really, in

government and part time on the business. And the business launched

a week after I left government, technically. And so who was your first

client at Orbis that you can talk about? So

we. I remember we had three initial clients. One

of them was a lawyer working for a Russian oligarch. I'm sure

you are aware of the other two. One was a

confectionary company, and the other was the.

The FAA, the Football Association's 2018

World cup bid, which of course led on to other things later.

Indeed. So we've got to accelerate

things, at least for this conversation and say the beginning of

your exposure to and

involvement in American politics

started with the. Is it GPS fusion?

So just tell us a bit about how you got into that space. I wouldn't

say we were that involved in American politics. And I would actually argue that what

we were doing was, if you like spying on Russia much

more than spying on America. I mean, what we were doing was we were running

Russian sources, and those Russian sources were telling us what they were

trying to do to America, how successful they'd been in doing that,

what their game plan was, who was involved, and so on.

So we, you know, didn't have any

direct exposure to American politicians. We had

our partner firm in America that tasked us on the Trump Russia

relationship in the 2016 election. And we had some contact

with the. The lawyer who was their ultimate

client, but we weren't sort of actively involved with any of the campaign

or the politics of the campaign. And we weren't really in

America either. I think I went over there briefly three times during

the campaign, but only for a couple of days. So our focus is very much

on collecting from Russian sources

and feeding it back to the client and then subsequently. The FBI,

and that

that piece of work culminated in the dossier

that was later exposed or

later appeared on buzzfeed. Yeah,

I mean, I think it's slightly misnomer to call it a dossier.

It was a set of live reports that needed to be processed and fed

in in real time during an election campaign, which is

quite unusual for us. I mean, you'll have seen

how we structure our reports. Normally it's much more of A polished,

finished article. They weren't really meant for written

consumption. They were briefs, effectively, for

Fusion GPS to brief a client on in real time. So, yes,

that was the reporting that eventually became known as the dossier and was eventually

leaked without our knowledge or permission to the media.

Again, thoughts as to how. Why somebody, a mole

within the. Somebody who had

patriotic or other

alignments, etc. Who leads it to the American

media? Yeah, we know who leaked it to the American media. It was a

former senior government official who we had trusted with its

custody on behalf of his boss, who was,

you remember Senator John McCain. So it was quite a shock when it

happened. Wow. And again, forgive me, because I

hadn't gone far enough in the book and I'm sure there are other bits

in it, but anything happened to that person that leaked it?

Apparently not. Never sued, unlike us, by any of the

protagonists, perhaps, because not seem to have any

resources worth suing over and having been merely a

sort of guardian of the material, not producer. So

slightly odd, but yes, and I'm sure leaked for,

you know, in a sense, the right reasons leaked not for money or

out of any wish to expose us, but leaked because they

feared as to what the implications of a Trump presidency would be

and the relationship with Russia would be for the US and the security of

the west. And learn, behold, it's still one of the main issues of the day,

isn't it? Indeed it is. And so just run

me through what happens. It gets leaked.

Then, of course, there is

the Biden presidency. So there's a. There's a hiatus,

but people still very concerned and obviously

very much aware that the. There was a

continuum of infiltration and

penetration of the Trump team,

as it were. So how does that just talk us through that

period from your experience? Well, our experience was that,

you know, initially we were very cooperative with the US Authorities

in their various investigations. But it became quite

clear a few years in, and particularly with the appointment of John Durham

as special counsel by Trump, Trump, who wasn't disbanded by

Biden, which was very disappointing, that actually what they were trying to

do was not get to the bottom of what happened, but really

kind of hit out at those who had reported and

done it and impugn our integrity and our

professionalism and attempt effectively to indict us

for things which we didn't even know existed. Like, for example, the

fact that. That. Not that we had. If you tell a lie to a federal

official in America, you can be charged with a criminal offense.

So there are all sorts of shenanigans going on. It's a real eye opener,

just how cynical and how corrupt, morally corrupt, certainly

a lot of these people were, they never got to the bottom of it. They

never really attempted to. And as time went on, it became more and more

hostile. It was a case of shoot the messenger, not, not the message.

And so we eventually became very wary of it. Once that

fell away, people started suing us and

Trump started suing us because obviously he'd gone nowhere

with the investigations. His allegations of a conspiracy and

a hoax, which are still very prominent, are nonsense, of course.

And that's the problem, that there's no factual basis for any

of his allegations, as there is with a lot of things he says

and does. But the reality is that this is actually at the very core

of the concerns that people have about his administration.

And if you look at what happened in Alaska, is it any

wonder and. Going back to the Fusion

relationship, did you, as a matter of interest, did you meet

Hillary Clinton at the time? Was that part of

or are you unable to comment? No, I am able to comment. I didn't meet

Hillary Clinton at the time. As I was saying too early, we didn't have any

direct contact with any politician or political campaigner.

And what not that I don't know a bit personally

as well. What impacted and has all of

this had on business, on

you personally, Chris, in terms of

stress, in terms of

just continuing what you do on a daily basis? It's had a huge

impact, Gary. I mean, you know, I've become a public figure, which is something that

certainly given my previous jobs, I would never even

imagined. And a regular media contributor. And I've been

a defendant in high court. I've been cross examined by

people in your profession incredibly aggressively in times.

So it's been, you know, a huge change in life. And, you know,

it's something that we've had to embrace. I think, you know, it's a genie that

couldn't be put back in the bottle. And so we tried to make the best

of it. And I think particularly the media platform that I've got now,

which is fairly unique actually, as a former intelligence

officer out there in the public sphere and the public square,

part of the debate is something that we've had to embrace. I've decided to

embrace it. I think that we, and I have

a big contribution to make now on some of the big geopolitical issues

of the day, particularly America, Russia, Trump, Russia,

Putin, the war, et cetera. And we haven't held back from it.

And we try and be as open and as frank as we can be. But

we are aware that we have a lot of enemies and a lot of people

looking to try and knock us back, particularly by using

lawfare, which features quite significantly in this story.

Yes. And it's this whole issue of, of

trying to, of using the legal process

to keep people quiet. I can, I just. Something

flew into my mind. I remember the Maxwell era when

he was. Whenever he didn't like what somebody

might have said about him, he would just issue proceedings. And

in those days, it was almost laughed off, as, you know, what a joke.

But it's not a laughing matter. And

bearing in mind the cost of defending yourself, the consequences,

which you know all too well, of not being

financially able to defend yourself

becomes existential. Yeah, people don't realize

that the impact of this stuff is broader than just defending and winning a

case. You know, the fact is that your insurance policies become

a lot more expensive, a lot more restrictive, such that we were

exposed, in fact, to a direct assault from Trump in

two cases, as you know, particularly the UK case, which has cost us

nearly £900,000 of our own money. And it's not because we weren't

insured, it's because there was a carve out put in our policy.

So, yeah, it's very significant, the impact of

it. And it's been painful and

debilitating to have to fork out for

your own defense costs. So, essentially,

yes, an attempt to silence us and

to dissuade and to deter sources from working with us,

particularly from places like China and Russia, very deliberately so.

And I think that we desperately need to deal with

this scourge and is a scourge.

Lots of friends and colleagues who have been through it as well, the

Catherine Beltons, the Tom Burgesses and so on, that we

need to get some, you know, First

Amendment type rules in place here to

prevent people like Trump coming here as legal tourists and

trying to stifle debate and stifle research. And one of the

worst things, I think, about the situation here at the moment is that that

libel and defamation is one thing. You know, if you choose to make

a public statement about somebody, that's one thing. But if you're

conducting an investigation behind the scenes and you're

attacked under data protection law, I think that is a completely different ball

game. And there's no doubt that data protection law is the weapon of

choice now by bad actors, particularly foreign ones, against

particularly investigative firms. And a lot of the attention,

because journalists shout the loudest go to journalists. And

libel. But actually The Data Protection Acts, the one that we fear the

most as investigators. Yes. I'm not surprised. And

again, it's one of those things is that it just. For my money, it

was rather ambiguously drafted. It's not entirely

clear sometimes what it's trying really to

legislate. And I guess, like with many laws,

people look at it in a particular way and realize

that they might just be able to persuade somebody that

this is a plausible interpretation of

a provision. Yeah, it's a very. The jurisprudence around

is very worrying. We had a case where there were three

times five allegations made at us, only two of

which stacked up in the end and 13 didn't, and we still ended up

paying costs. Yeah. Again, are the

vagaries and the in imbalances in

the English litigation system, which is just horrifically

expensive. And in the cases

that you've been involved in, Chris, have you ever had a judge

find that your. That he did not believe your evidence, or

have you been lucky enough or not lucky enough? Have you been in a position

where judges have assessed your credibility and said,

I believe what this man has said? Yes, I. Very much

so. Justice Warby, who you'll be aware of, who was the judge

on the two high court cases that we fought at trial

here, was very complimentary about my evidence and my reliability as a

witness. He found against us on those two small points. But

in general, I think I wouldn't be critical of

the decisions that have been made by judges. I would be critical of the process

that enables you to be dragged through this for years at huge

expense before the judges do make those decisions. And that's the

problem. Yes. And the period of time and the access

to somebody who

is able to make a decision. What were the two points? As a matter of

interest, what were the two points that you were found responsible

or were your. You won't believe this. So it was an

allegation that there was a corrupt relationship between

two Russian oligarchs and Putin that was

intermediated by a particular individual. And

the report, the source had said that this had started in

1994 or something, and actually the guy didn't start

working for the oligarchs until 1997. So it was, in a

sense, it was sort of splitting hairs, but because it was factually

wrong, and we admitted it was factually wrong in the end, that's why

we got hit with those. But in general, as I say, I think

that the judges in the English system have been very

fair on us and actually have found very largely in our

favor through this process. It's the process itself that's the fault.

And so looking at that process, what

stage is it knowing a teeny bit about

litigation, applying for a strikeout or whatever or

a hearing on a point of law, at what stage? If you

had a magic wand now to introduce something into the English

legal system, what would it be to protect cases from going

on so that 2 out of 20

allegations just make you bankrupt financially?

I think it would be a public figure defense statute like you have in the

US Sullivan against New York Times is the case, isn't it?

That's the key one. Because if somebody's defined as a public

figure, which I am in America, so you know, I mean, I'm in this, in

this pot anyway in America, yes, you want to for

defamation unless you can prove actual malice. And the fact is that

no professional worth their salt is going to be

knowingly lying about anything and certainly not about

something of that magnitude. And so I think that's the key one. And I know

that I talk to politicians about this, they don't like that idea because,

you know, it'll affect them. But it's affected me in America and I still

support it. I would find it very difficult to sue anybody in America even

if I wanted to, because I'm a public figure. And that should be the case

here as well. And it's gone far too much over to the other side where

public interest is not strong enough in these cases and the

reputation of the litigants, the plaintiff is always taken far too

seriously, I believe, by the law. But I think the way you would

deal with that in one fell swoop would be to introduce a public

figure statute. Just interesting you mentioned that and I'm

sure I've missed something here that

parliamentarians, politicians don't like it because surely

they would be protected or they feel they want the right to sue everyone

regardless of whether there was malice. Correct. They

don't like the idea that they would be declared public figures and that would

make it a lot more difficult for them to sue. A bit

hypocritical, but anyway, it's a bit big debate at the moment. It

is indeed. Well, I haven't delved into as

many of the things that I'd hoped to, but I certainly have got

a much better flavor and I hope our listeners have of

the human being. Kristeel, not that you won't get it from reading your book,

but not many people get the opportunity of meeting you or as many people

as probably would like. So I really appreciate the chance to chat with you, Chris.

And who knows, there may be a part two, because your

career so far can at least

fill a half a dozen episodes of something like this.

But who knows? I know your time is. Is limited. Yeah. I think the other

important thing to say about the book, it's part of this problem that we were

just talking about. Talking. You know, I. When I went to write this book,

I insisted that any publisher that published it would have to indemnify it.

And they did that in America and Canada and Germany, but no publisher here

so far has been prepared to do that. And that's precisely because of the

issues in civil law and lawfare and public figure

statute that I'm talking about. So people don't understand

the degree to which there's a problem with freedom of speech here in the UK

as a result of some of these civil laws. Yes, that really is.

I haven't. Because it's only recently, as a result of

looking at the background to our discussion today,

that. And now that you're putting the pieces together, I realise that of

course, it's the insurance industry connected with the

litigation process that is so critical here. Yeah,

absolutely. Well, I wish you all the well, may the force

at least continue to be with you and your colleagues.

And I look forward to many opportunities of speaking to you

in the future. Chris and I'll be quite happy and delighted to come back on

if you want to carry on the conversation. I would love to. So thanks a

lot and thank you very much for spending your time today. Take care.

Take care. Bye bye. Thank you

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