Spooks s03e09 Episode Script
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's Adam Carter doing here? - I've drafted him in.
- You know his reputation.
- Brilliant.
- Mace ordered me over to Thames House.
- No way.
- It's orders.
- I'm going to Harry.
I want it.
You can question our methods - we do that all the time.
But don't question our motives.
If I come over to Five, I can have a life with you in this house.
Post 9-1 1 , we made a decision that nothing, nobody was off-limits.
We can't say any more "This we do not do".
When Mr Morgan gets home, then you can leave him be.
Do you mind if I don't stay until the bitter end? A tail car will follow him into the village and then there's a covert team lined up for the overnight watch.
You go on.
Oh, Harry's got a car booked for eight.
- If there are any problems - It's fine, honest.
- You out tonight? - Maybe.
- See you tomorrow.
- Ruth - Our man here lives off junction? - Junction five.
So why is he coming off at four? No.
No, please don't do this SHE SIGHS Better get Harry.
Robert Morgan.
Ex-army.
A known trafficker in illegal arms, under routine surveillance.
But up till now, nothing different? No.
Today's timing and route fits the pattern of the last few days.
His activity has been dull as ditch water, until this deviation.
- Police? - One tail car.
- How long's he been there? - Ten minutes.
He's right beside a disused RAF base.
- What's he doing? - I think I know what he's doing there.
Harry, what is this? This is a map of all the old Soviet KGB weapons hides scattered across the country in the good old days of the Cold War.
- I didn't know these existed.
- No, not many people do.
- Robert Morgan's one of them.
- Yes.
And for reasons best known to himself he's chosen now to visit this one.
Keep a very close eye on this man.
- GUNSHOT - 'Get down!' - Harry! - 'Don't move!' - Someone's fired a shot.
- 'Hold still.
' Red-flash Adam.
Accidental discharge from one of the police weapons teams.
- Any of them hurt? - Not seriously.
Pity.
So they're holding Morgan? Yes.
I've sent Colin and Malcolm to check the hide.
What do you think? 'lf we allow the police to question him, they'll let him go.
' And now he knows we're onto him, he's lost his value as an asset.
He won't put a foot out of place.
There is another option, Harry.
We could bring him in.
A man closely connected with illegal arms trade is hanging round weapons hides.
I want to ask him a few questions.
We just have to conceal the fact that we've got him.
- The police? - I'll deal with them.
When you have your little chat, only tell me what I need to know.
Don't worry, I understand the principle of deniability.
Just don't give me too much to deny.
Don't let him sleep.
And watch him - he knows what he's doing.
ADAM: 'Well, you can be pretty sure' Morgan's not setting up a shooting gallery.
He's a civilian contractor.
- Mercenary is nearer the mark.
- Finance, friends and family.
- Everybody has a weakness.
- What's our time frame? Morgan's disappeared, so whoever's hired him will have to assume an unfriendly force has taken him.
And he'd be right about that.
- It's a three-dimensional jigsaw.
- The weapons hide? You need to look at it as though it's a three-dimensional jigsaw.
We were using the ultra-sound to check for booby traps, but instead, in the middle of the container, we found a space where a weapon used to be.
- Morgan must have taken something.
- So what was it? - A laser target designator.
- One of these.
This one we found in the hide, one is missing.
You pre-sight it, plant it in the ground, and then it can be triggered to guide a missile to its target.
The laser beam hits the target and causes an invisible cone to rise above it.
The missile uses the cone as a funnel to find its way to where it needs to go.
The beauty of this system is that it enables the control team that fires the missiles to remain miles out of the way.
I don't think "beauty" is the word if Number 10 went up in smoke.
Erm, rather disturbingly, this ties in with information from E-Section.
We scan the air above our cities for unusual radio activity.
Um, last week, one of our scanners picked up something strange.
An untraceable flash.
At the time we didn't know the exact cause, but it looks like it's a laser designator having a trial run.
- Where was this? - London.
This changes things completely.
If the designator has already been pre-set and tested, we can probably assume an attack is imminent.
If I was running the op, I'd bring it forward.
The information on this attack will have a shelf-life of? That's how long we've got to stop a guided missile falling in London.
Danny, you're with me in the interrogation.
Ruth, check with Echelon for any chatter and get in touch with GCHQ.
- He left his car near the weapons dump.
- You and Colin pull it apart.
- I'll get on to those three Fs.
- Start with Finance.
This guy'll have spent his life doing anti-interrogation courses.
And I've spent half my career devising them.
He'll reveal enough to keep us interested.
After three days, he can tell us anything.
By then his team will have changed plans or carried out the attacks without him.
Exactly.
This guy will hold out until his information's obsolete.
- How do you want to play this? - Let's see how co-operative he is.
And if he isn't? Your current address? That's not such an easy question to answer.
Give it a whirl.
OK There's two.
and 32 St David's Road, Hereford.
And would you prefer we call you Ken Johnson, Robert Morgan or Rick Garbut? Take your pick.
In my line of work, I need more than one name.
You know the score.
How would you describe your line of work? HE INHALES AND EXHALES Do I get a phone call? We're not holding you on a speeding charge.
We're holding you under the 2000 Terrorism Act, under which we can detain you for seven days and longer, if the friendly in-house magistrate agrees.
Which, after careful consideration of each case, he usually does.
But tell us what we want to know and you can be home in time for tea and crumpets.
At either 32 St David's Road, Hereford, with the wife Nancy, or at 43 Kenilworth Road, Derby, with the girlfriend, the lovely Lucy.
It's not a criminal offence to be having an affair.
Perhaps not.
But storing hi-tech weaponry in an old Soviet arms dump is.
- Who's running you? - Why should I say? I don't even know who you are.
If you don't co-operate, this isn't going to be nice.
Take your time.
But think very carefully about the choices you're making.
I'm afraid I'm going to have to put an additional burden your way.
Of course, Harry.
The Lord High Executioner, our Director General, is retiring at the end of the summer.
- Personal reasons.
- Exactly.
Personal reasons.
And they've asked me to apply for the position.
Well, that's great.
Congratulations.
It's not just me, there's a short list, but they want me to go for an interview.
And when they invite you, they make it very hard to say no.
But why would you want to say no? Well, when there's a mercenary using his skills to help terrorists fire a missile at central London, I'd rather be here than lounging on the seventh floor.
I can help you prepare for the interview.
Likely questions, stuff like that.
Obvious things about the future of the service, plans, failings, threats Thank you Ruth, but Not at the expense of our current operation.
And I'd appreciate it if you kept this to yourself, kept it secret.
Of course.
Isn't that what we're meant to be good at? This was just another job.
Your job was simply moving weapons from one place to another? Pretty much.
So you were just using those dumps as a place to store the weapons? - That's right.
- Guess what my next question is.
- Who was I working for? - Correct.
It isn't that different on the outside than it is here on the inside.
Working for Her Majesty's Government? You're on a job.
You don't ask about the before and after parts.
It's easier and safer, and so you just don't think about it.
Do you make any sense of that? How many arms dumps have you visited recently? Fascinating history, those places have.
Soviets built them near to British Air Force bases during the Cold War.
We did it to them, of course.
And you were one of the guys crawling around Siberia setting them up.
We know.
Look, if I were to hazard a guess as to the terms of my employment, I'd say that it was something to do with running an operation against elements with a terrorist structure.
You're saying this was a black op, that you were working for the government on a deniable operation? - It had that feel.
- OK, this is really important.
If it was, we need to know right away.
So if I knock on the door of the JIC, Six or UKN, whoever, they'll tell me exactly what's going on? - Not necessarily.
- You said it was a government operation.
- I said it had that feel.
- Then someone must know about it.
Operations don't just appear out of nowhere.
At my end of the ladder we don't ask.
I've been involved in a number of operations whose - what did my old colonel like to call it? - whose provenance was unclear.
You jump out a plane at night with 120lbs strapped to your feet, knowing that when you land there'll be people trying to kill you.
You don't have time to worry who dreamt it up.
- Stop.
- What? I've already warned you about this.
You're just talking this into the ground.
- We won't get bored and go away.
- I'm saying I'm just a private contractor.
- Who counter-signed your contract? - What contract? You're not doing this for charity.
Someone with your expertise is being paid a lot, and I don't believe that you don't know who's paying.
That depends on the nature of the operation.
The more deniable it is, the more everyone involved has to be overqualified, even for the most mundane job.
I was just doing the heavy lifting.
Morgan's bank statements make interesting reading.
- He earns a lot and likes to spend it.
- Our first option is to offer money.
If he's stupid enough to turn that down, we'll start asset stripping.
He's a mercenary.
Let's try and do a deal with him first.
He definitely knows what's going on, so why isn't he telling us? When we discover that, we're on our way to finding out what this is all about.
What's in it for him? - Belief? - Give me a break.
- Money, then.
- OK, let's go after that.
Danny, offer him the deal.
If he doesn't take it, get his signature and we'll drain his accounts.
You OK? Of course.
I like this stuff.
Just remember what it's like on the other side.
I'm not likely to forget.
You should be prepared to answer questions on four main areas - the state of readiness of the service, your character and operational experience and, most importantly, the nature of the present threat and how far do we go to combat it? How far do we go in all senses? "Is there anything we shouldn't be doing?" Yes, I like that.
How about the other candidates? Do we know who they are? Of course not.
Nor, Ruth, could I openly approve of anyone trying to find them out.
- But if a list of them happened? - To find its way onto my desk? Then I'd have to send it back to its rightful owner, unopened.
When you've got your circulation back, I'd like you to sign for your belongings.
Where's my car? We're having it valeted.
Help yourself.
Thanks, but I'm not hungry.
- Something wrong? - No.
OK, look at this from my perspective.
We find you next to an old Soviet arms dump full of new kit.
In fact, so new that my technical guys think Christmas has come early, and still you claim that you're just the water carrier.
I've told you all that I know.
We know how much you guys get paid if a job like this works out.
Just tell us what this is about and we'll match that figure.
We'll make sure you're not prosecuted and you're compensated to the full amount.
- What's this? - A deal for you to sign.
You don't believe me? OK, well, as you know, this is all being taped, and if you still have doubts, we'll get in that lawyer you asked for - a witness, anyone you like.
OK, you've done anti-interrogation stuff.
We all know how this works - you'll have to give us something.
This is the best way of doing it.
Still not hungry? - No.
- OK.
Just tell us the nature of this operation, and that deal still stands whenever you want.
OK, I know you guys have a rather sniffy attitude to the Security Services, because you're the glory boys, aren't you? I mean, we can't run up a hill carrying a tree trunk or score 20 out of 20 on the pop-gun range.
But then, we always find people to do that for us.
What we are capable of is a very different type of operation - in your case, making sure that no area of your life goes uncontaminated.
Everything that you have worked to achieve we can unravel, and if you don't believe me, just watch.
- I'll get the signature to Ruth to deal with.
- Good.
I'm dangling carrots and he's not biting.
We need to up the ante.
Let's put a siren loop in there.
Are you sure about that? The more we turn up the heat, the more effective your role becomes, Danny.
Let's put him in the stress position and have a guard on him 24 hours, then I'll go in and give him the bad news about his money.
I know what he's thinking.
I know exactly what's going through his head.
How come? It's just one of the things I know.
SIREN BLARES The human ear is most sensitive to that exact pitch.
So it drives you slowly insane and can lead to complete hearing loss.
Isn't that called torture? I have accessed a list of all Morgan's deposits and withdrawals.
Well, if he's clever he'll have deposited all the cash in small amounts.
Exactly.
Thanks, Ruth.
Small amounts of money found in Morgan's numerous bank accounts can be traced back to one large deposit.
£100,000 was credited to an account belonging to Ken Johnson, one of Morgan's pseudonyms, in Saffron Walden on the 31st of last month.
Any tie-up? Oh, yes.
Instructions were received that day to go to Saffron Walden from - A private bank in the City.
- Good.
Find out whose account that money came from.
We've traced the account to a subsidiary of Anglo-West African Oil.
An oil company? A laser designator? It doesn't add up.
The payment trail is well hidden.
It's not the kind of business strategy likely to be announced in the annual report.
Multi-nationals have long used people like Morgan for protection and security in their installations abroad.
Still, we can't overlook anything.
Ruth? Anglo-West African is bidding for a pipeline contract across the lvory Coast which could provide 30% of the world's supplies, bypassing any reliance on the Middle East, and Her Majesty's Government is paying for the pipeline with taxpayer's money.
We need to get somebody at Anglo to tell us what's going on.
I've a list of executives we might recruit.
Subject to the usual array of human failings, I trust.
- I prefer to use more positive aspects.
- Each to their own.
OK, I think Morgan will be softened up enough by now.
I'll get back in there.
Just like to say how glad we are to have you staying with us at Five.
We're lucky to have you.
I'll need Malcolm to organise me a pool car.
Of course.
Nothing too special.
What were you doing? You must have seen me coming! - Sorry, I just didn't - What do you think mirrors are for? I don't know the insurance company or anything.
My husband looks after all that.
But let me give you my card.
Got a pen? I'll write my registration number on it.
Thanks.
Sorry.
Well, here's my card and my insurers.
Will you be OK getting back? I live just off the Wellington Road, if it's any help Look, I want it repaired.
Just call me with the details.
Sure.
Sorry! Juliet Taylor.
38, lefty at university - classic sell-out.
Had three crashes in the last year, which is why I thought a car accident was the best form of introduction.
Good.
She'll want to settle informally rather than through the insurers.
- How did she take it? - Not very gracefully.
Though she'll still have to meet me if she wants her money.
- Is she the right person? - Number two to the Director of Finance.
Weak spots? Her daughter, Mattie, who she's desperate to get into the local posh school.
Use that - although it could take time.
We need to find a more immediate way.
Also, I need somewhere to meet her.
Our place is still a bit of a tip.
- Use Danny's flat.
- Won't he mind? No.
Why should he? Harry! I'd like to ask about your strengths and weaknesses.
Haven't you noticed we're under some pressure? Which is why this is just the right time.
Do you think the end always justifies the means in an operation? I would review each case on its individual merits.
Isn't it better not to procrastinate? Makes you sound like a politician.
Perhaps they want a politician.
But you said you didn't want the job, you want to be in touch at ground level.
Do you think you always do? I think my strengths are I hold onto certain things I feel are important and good.
I'm referring to a certain ethical dimension to our work.
We won't defeat terrorism by destroying democracy.
Mm.
That's all very high-minded, but in practice what does that mean? Does it mean results aren't everything? You draw the line somewhere, don't you? I think that's enough for now, Ruth.
I'm just enabling you to fail gracefully, as requested.
For which I will be eternally grateful.
Hypothetically, Harry, you wouldn't forget about us, would you? When you're pacing the thickly carpeted floor of your new office? I didn't know I paced, Ruth.
Only in a good way.
What? Nothing.
Four years ago, I was taken prisoner in the Yemen by a group I was working with.
I was undercover as an aid-worker.
How long did they hold you for? Long enough.
And? Did they torture me? Yes, they did.
- And? - And nothing.
That's what they did.
You got your bottle? We have to move it up a gear.
SIREN STOPS What's the target? This will go on until you tell me.
The physical stuffs just a sideshow, you'll get over that.
This other stuff This will be with you forever.
We've got into your accounts Paid a visit to your bank.
Thank you, by the way, for your signature.
You've been well paid recently, but this morning, with our help, you donated all your savings to charity.
That includes the £200,000 you hid from the revenue in your private bank account in Geneva.
Maybe if you're lucky, they'll name a ward after you in some godforsaken hospital in the Sudan.
What? Think I'm bluffing? You think you can always make it back again, working for one of your old mates? In about 15 minutes, you're going to seriously regret that.
Shit.
Yeah.
Yeah, there'll be a lot of that.
Take this now.
Drink it before it gets worse.
There's an antidote in here.
It'll be effective in 10 minutes.
And if you're bullshitting me? Fine.
Don't tell me anything until you're better.
Look, I'll throw in the money as well.
What more can I say? What is it with you? Why are you making your life so impossible? You have about five minutes before it gets really nasty.
Just remember, you brought this on yourself.
Did we need to make him so sick? Did he need to aim a missile at London? There's no comparison.
Why is he resisting so hard? Have you asked yourself that? Yes.
All the time.
He must have some very good reason, and it doesn't seem to be money.
What's our next step? Let's continue with friends.
Then I'll get very specific about the laser designator.
Then he'll know he's close to the finishing post.
I can make that seem like a long way away.
- I haven't got long.
- Sure.
I've spoken to my husband about the insurance and I have the details.
It's just that he's a bit worried about our no-claims bonus.
I'm not thrilled at the prospect of having to talk to mine.
Would you be happy to settle in cash? That would suit me fine.
You've got my address.
- You'll drop it round? - Of course.
That's no problem.
My daughter's school is just round the corner - Trinity House.
Really? I want to send my little girl there, but everybody keeps saying how impossible it is to get in.
Oh, you know, there are ways.
As with everything.
I mean, I'm on the PTA.
If there's anything I can do to help I'm not sure I could No, really, it's the least I can do, considering the damage I've done.
Why don't I drop by your place? Great, yeah.
I'll tidy up.
OK, you get out of here - broke, but in one piece.
Are you listening to me, because I'm predicting your future here for you? Nod if you can hear me.
The one glimmer of light that you can see is that all the people you work with, all the old boys from the army, all your friends, you think they'll stick with you, help you back on your feet.
But what if we tamper with your military records? My guess is that'll make you virtually unemployable.
Let's say Let's say that you exaggerated your success in the army Let's say your main claim to fame turned out to be a series of botched operations, where you were negligent of your men and cowardly in the face of enemy fire.
The men I served with will know that's a load of old bollocks.
Let's have a look at the people you served with and who you now work with in the private security business.
All their companies have a very important relationship, apart from the one with you - the one that they enjoy with Her Majesty's Government.
Us.
Or, at the moment me.
Now, if we present your friends with a choice: "By all means use Morgan, "but if you do, you'll never work on another government contract again", what do you think they'll do? Is their loyalty going to be to the good old days or will it be the future of their companies, themselves, their families? - I know who my friends are.
- Oh, they'll still be your friends.
They just won't be offering you more work - not if they want to stay solvent.
You know why? Because they won't be getting any more business from us.
What's in this for you? I mean, look at you.
You haven't slept or eaten for 36 hours, your guts are shot to pieces.
The longer you say nothing, the more I know you're hiding something really big.
What's the operation? What's the target? If it's the money, the money's all gone.
So what's it for? The old days? All your colleagues who are destined to have a black strip over their eyes in one of those kiss-and-tell books with flames on the outside that you lot keep writing? What are you so frightened of? What they'll do to you? Is that it? Is that it? All that martial arts, unarmed combat, "Jap-slapping" or whatever you call it, and that's all you can manage? I know what you're thinking.
If I can hold out another 24 hours, another 36 If I can hold out that long I know what you've trained yourself to think about, because I devised the course.
We know you're using a laser designator.
Ah.
That got your attention.
Now, tell me what the target is and when you're planning the attack or I'll make things so bad that everything that's happened in the last few hours will seem like a pleasant memory.
I think he's more frightened of what his friends will do to him than he is of us.
I'm not so sure about that.
Look, I think it's time we moved to the third F.
Family.
Perhaps we should've just started with family.
I always hope we won't have to go there.
But sometimes we have no choice and we have to behave worse than them.
You mean create the impression that we're capable of behaving worse.
Or just behave worse.
Otherwise, we're not going to be able to find out what we need to find out.
Don't you see what the danger is here?! What, that something blows up in London? No, that we turn into them, the people we're fighting.
People like Morgan.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a danger.
But at the moment, I can't see any alternative.
I'm going home to wash.
When you do your interrogations, do you ever think about what happened to you? Yes.
Do you think that's a good thing? An effective thing, maybe - I know how they think.
Do you ever sympathise with him? We're not the same.
He's a traitor who'll use his skills to kill innocent people in return for money.
Still, aren't some things just wrong? - Like torture.
- I wouldn't call this torture.
I wouldn't call this torture yet at all, but I'll let you know when we get there.
Friends and finance aren't working.
I'm worried that when Adam moves to family, things could get nasty.
- We need something from Juliet Taylor.
- My new best friend.
Good.
Get her to tell us why Anglo-West African Oil are paying Morgan.
I'm on it.
I see the covert-entry boys are doing their work on Morgan's life.
Harry, is there any area that we don't touch? - Ethics? Here? - I'm serious.
Say to do with his family.
Morgan's daughter, Mary.
She's eight.
She needs a liver transplant.
They're looking for a donor.
She has her mother's surname.
That's why we didn't find it before.
Look, he calls her all the time.
I mean, it's possible that I just never came across this particular piece of information.
Cos you don't trust what Adam might do with it? We don't know where this is all going.
Though we do know that it's nothing to do with the sick daughter.
You don't think she's got enough on her plate? I mean, do you never draw the line on this stuff? - Where's your little girl? - She's staying with her gran for the week.
I think this is all of it.
Thank you for doing this.
You were at Manchester? - My husband was.
He loved it.
- So did I.
I did political science, which at the time was a hotbed of radicalism.
Funny how your life changes.
Now I find myself working for, of all things, an oil company.
What do you think about that? Well, a big mortgage to pay tends to sharpen the senses a little.
- MOBILE RINGS - Oh, sorry.
I really need to take this.
Can I use your hall? - Sure.
- Thanks.
'Tom's at the rugby and Mattie's playing with a friend.
We'll have a couple of hours.
MAN: Where are you? 'Trying to sort out this nightmare with the car, but I'm only five minutes away.
- MAN: I'll be waiting.
- 'Dying to see you.
' Sorry about that.
My mum.
She's not been well recently.
- Oh, dear.
- Well, you do what you can.
You know how it is.
What do you think? - Potentially, it's dynamite.
- My thoughts exactly.
- But we should - Save it until the end? Until we really need it.
What's the worst we can do with this information? Remove the daughter from the donor list or something more immediate? Put her in danger? What I like about you is you never say the "imagine if it was your daughter" stuff.
Imaginative compassion is a good thing, but it's not always useful in this job.
The father-daughter relationship's strong.
Seems he's paid for all the treatment.
They haven't got insurance, but he's taken her private.
- And the mother? - Remarried.
Other children.
He's a good father.
Better than most.
- Who found this stuff? - Ruth.
She can't have been happy about the uses we might put it to.
I think she very nearly didn't show me at all.
HE SLURS I just get paid, I've told you.
I don't know where the money comes from.
Let me give you a clue.
Does Anglo-West African Oil mean anything to you? - Well, I've heard of it.
- Oh, come off it! That's the company you're working for.
Look, you've done enough.
We're impressed.
Now, give yourself a break.
We found out who pays you, and we've been transferring your money to all your favourite charities, particularly Save The Children.
Which, with such a sick daughter, must be a cause close to your heart.
You know how this works.
You know what the next stage is, don't you? Family.
Do you want us to go there? Your daughter Hasn't she got enough to deal with without you dragging her through all this? Look at him.
You probably think this has been a classic good-cop-bad-cop routine, don't you? If even my colleague doesn't know how far I'm prepared to go .
.
how comfortable are you feeling right now? You know I'm not speaking to you officially, Harry.
I've gathered that.
Your sudden desire to take in the view was a bit of a giveaway.
I'm just pointing out that Adam's background means - His experiences in the Middle East? - Yes.
- Make me make me worried about - How far he'll go? Well, it's not so much that as the fact that he loses himself in this.
It's like he's paying Morgan back for what happened to him.
I feel awful going behind his back like this.
What with all the urgency We have to find a more informal way.
Is there anything specific I can do? Anything that would help? I suppose it's the daughter I feel most uneasy about.
If it was possible, I'd like you to call that one, before we directly involve her.
OK.
I don't have a problem with that.
I was simply trying to keep you above it all.
So much for deniability! I did say that, but I'm willing to take my share of the responsibility, so I suppose now I'm saying something different.
- You're not going to weaken on me? - I've never been known to.
Fi, you have to close on her.
He's still holding out on us.
I can't appeal to Juliet's lefty past.
There's no ethical dimension to her life.
But she's having an affair.
Blackmail her.
She tells us who Morgan's working for or we tell her husband.
How do you know this? I listened to a conversation she had with her lover.
And then I followed her and saw them.
Blackmail's not healthy for a long-term relationship with a source, but it can be highly effective in the short term.
We all do things we'd rather not.
You bitch.
Anglo-West African Oil is employing someone called Robert Morgan.
- I want you to find out what he's doing.
- I can't access information like that.
- I think you can.
- What do you mean? - Why would they talk to me? - I wanted this to be amicable.
I strongly suggest that you help us and then everything will be forgotten.
Forgotten? What are you talking about? Some of us have principles that don't include spying on our own companies.
How do you sleep at night? Not as well as you - especially after your long afternoons with your friend Simon.
Or do your principles include screwing around behind your husband's back? I want that information.
And I want it this afternoon.
- Tell me.
- I never betray my team.
You will.
We'll make sure there's no fallout from the people you work with.
How are you gonna do that? By making it look like we discovered all this another way.
You know about this shit, don't you? What do you mean? I mean, you know.
Not just from training.
You've been through this, haven't you? - A lot worse.
- Thought so.
And I'm prepared to go there again just to show you what it's like.
'Robert Morgan is employed by Anglo-West African Oil.
' Yes, that much we know.
It's why you're in this awkward position.
He's paid by a department called External Development, who look into any opposition to our plans for strategic growth.
Things like the pipeline contract? - Opposition from African countries? - Eventually.
- But also - Rivals for the contract.
That's it, isn't it? I don't know any more than that.
Who are you calling? Your home.
I've got tapes as well.
If your husband sees how much more you enjoy yourself with your afternoon lover OK.
External Development is mostly concerned with our rivals over the African pipeline contract - the Oil and Petroleum Corporation.
All I know is that something major is planned.
Something that will remove them as a player.
- Please, I've told you everything.
- I'm not calling your husband.
I'm calling mine.
Anglo-West African are going to use Morgan's team to guide a missile onto the HQ of their biggest rival? But make it look like a terrorist attack.
- Where's the missile coming from? - We don't know.
Clear the building to minimise casualties.
We can't have bombs raining down on us.
We must find that designator.
- What will you do? - Take Morgan on a boat trip.
Danny, I need your help.
You're gonna take someone on a short tour of an oil company headquarters.
Better not be who I think it is.
Where's the designator and the rest of your team? A laser beam is targeting a bomb onto that building there, just as you planned.
Why don't you take a look, see where your bomb's going to land when your mission is successful? We told your daughter that this was a special sightseeing trip that you'd organised for her to apologise for not being in contact recently.
She thinks she's going to meet you there.
Where's the designator? I'll need a new identity.
For me and my family.
Can you guarantee my safety? Danny, leave her.
Leave the girl and get out of there.
Half a mile downstream, attached to the embankment wall just before Waterloo Bridge.
And the team with the launcher? She's still up there.
Crystal Palace.
The park.
Rock's Hill's entrance.
Now, get her out of there.
Danny, you can bring her down now.
You know I'm a dead man, don't you? They'll find me wherever I go.
That's what it does to you, doesn't it? What? The realisation that there are no depths to which you wouldn't sink.
Because of what happened to you before.
And you will always carry it with you.
Just you wait When they kick you out, you'll be just like me.
Out on the open market, and there's people who'd pay a lot to employ a private contractor like you.
You going to put in a good word for me? I serve my country, not the highest bidder.
You remember what that was like? Don't try and dignify what you do with all that stuff about private contractors.
Call it by it's real name.
You're a mercenary.
Is there anything you don't do? Does the present climate put anything off limits, or does the end always justify the means? I certainly believe that as chief of an organisation, you can't be involved in every decision, but you can set the tone for what is and isn't acceptable.
And on what isn't, is there a line that you don't cross? Definitely.
What was it Patton said about being permitted to walk with the devil to enable you to cross the bridge? But the end can never justify the means entirely.
You have to be smarter than that, otherwise what are we defending, what are we fighting for? You spoke about your job as one of defending democracy from all sides.
Apart from the obvious ones, what other threats were you thinking of? It's too easy to always look abroad, to think that's where the main danger lies.
- We need to look closer to home.
- Give me a "for instance".
I believe corporate access to the higher reaches of government is far too easy and that a lot of foreign policy stems from the boardrooms of our multi-nationals.
But hasn't it always been this way? And surely these are just theoretical threats? No, they are not.
These people will stop at nothing to get their way.
It's difficult to set your own limits when dealing with those people, to resist behaving like they do.
It's not always easy.
Did you use the daughter? I had no choice.
- I'm sorry you had to do that.
- Yes, so am I.
Made a decision about these colours? Well, what about these two? Cobalt blue or azure? They both look the same to me.
Yeah, well, they're not.
Well, here's another cobalt blue, but it's different.
I mean, how do I know? There must be a book or something that tells you what colour cobalt blue really is, gives you a definitive colour.
I think you're taking this truth thing a bit too far.
Stop being so literal-minded.
This is home.
It's real life.
There has to be a benchmark, so everyone knows what they're doing.
I think we can leave the paints for a while.
I'm just saying, how can I decide if I can't tell the difference? I know.
I can see that.
I'm sorry.
Come on.
Come on, let's go get a drink.
I feel like we need to be surrounded by people we don't know.
TV: 'Business news.
Anglo-West African Oil has taken a huge hit as its share price tumbled by 40%.
'The London stock market is predicting further falls in the next few days following news that the company has been unsuccessful in its bid for a significant pipeline contract across the lvory Coast.
'The company's managing director resigned today' See? Wrongs righted, evildoers brought to heel, miracles performed.
Is there no end to our goodness, Ruth? I got down to the final two, and then they parachuted a late contender into the job.
But that's what you wanted.
Yes, but it's annoying when the best man for the job is passed over for a politician.
- It seems you were right.
- Yes.
But I'm pleased.
Yeah, well, I'm not.
There's a scratch on the floor of my flat.
Seems the removal men weren't careful enough after Fiona moved out.
My point exactly.
I wouldn't be involved with these crucial issues if I were DG.
Set Adam on the removal men.
He'll get to the bottom of it if anyone will.
- Off out, are we, Ruth? - Yes.
I'm only three days late.
And if anything happens between here and the pods, please don't tell me.
- Ruth? - I'm not listening.
You have brought chaos and anarchy to Iraq.
Today we will hold you to account.
They're not civilians.
It does make the moral dilemma somewhat less acute.
I will be burned alive together with my spy colleague.
One of them will be executed and you have to chose which one.
They're gonna kill us.
- Tell me where they're holding my wife.
- I can't.
GUNSHOT Oh, my God!
- You know his reputation.
- Brilliant.
- Mace ordered me over to Thames House.
- No way.
- It's orders.
- I'm going to Harry.
I want it.
You can question our methods - we do that all the time.
But don't question our motives.
If I come over to Five, I can have a life with you in this house.
Post 9-1 1 , we made a decision that nothing, nobody was off-limits.
We can't say any more "This we do not do".
When Mr Morgan gets home, then you can leave him be.
Do you mind if I don't stay until the bitter end? A tail car will follow him into the village and then there's a covert team lined up for the overnight watch.
You go on.
Oh, Harry's got a car booked for eight.
- If there are any problems - It's fine, honest.
- You out tonight? - Maybe.
- See you tomorrow.
- Ruth - Our man here lives off junction? - Junction five.
So why is he coming off at four? No.
No, please don't do this SHE SIGHS Better get Harry.
Robert Morgan.
Ex-army.
A known trafficker in illegal arms, under routine surveillance.
But up till now, nothing different? No.
Today's timing and route fits the pattern of the last few days.
His activity has been dull as ditch water, until this deviation.
- Police? - One tail car.
- How long's he been there? - Ten minutes.
He's right beside a disused RAF base.
- What's he doing? - I think I know what he's doing there.
Harry, what is this? This is a map of all the old Soviet KGB weapons hides scattered across the country in the good old days of the Cold War.
- I didn't know these existed.
- No, not many people do.
- Robert Morgan's one of them.
- Yes.
And for reasons best known to himself he's chosen now to visit this one.
Keep a very close eye on this man.
- GUNSHOT - 'Get down!' - Harry! - 'Don't move!' - Someone's fired a shot.
- 'Hold still.
' Red-flash Adam.
Accidental discharge from one of the police weapons teams.
- Any of them hurt? - Not seriously.
Pity.
So they're holding Morgan? Yes.
I've sent Colin and Malcolm to check the hide.
What do you think? 'lf we allow the police to question him, they'll let him go.
' And now he knows we're onto him, he's lost his value as an asset.
He won't put a foot out of place.
There is another option, Harry.
We could bring him in.
A man closely connected with illegal arms trade is hanging round weapons hides.
I want to ask him a few questions.
We just have to conceal the fact that we've got him.
- The police? - I'll deal with them.
When you have your little chat, only tell me what I need to know.
Don't worry, I understand the principle of deniability.
Just don't give me too much to deny.
Don't let him sleep.
And watch him - he knows what he's doing.
ADAM: 'Well, you can be pretty sure' Morgan's not setting up a shooting gallery.
He's a civilian contractor.
- Mercenary is nearer the mark.
- Finance, friends and family.
- Everybody has a weakness.
- What's our time frame? Morgan's disappeared, so whoever's hired him will have to assume an unfriendly force has taken him.
And he'd be right about that.
- It's a three-dimensional jigsaw.
- The weapons hide? You need to look at it as though it's a three-dimensional jigsaw.
We were using the ultra-sound to check for booby traps, but instead, in the middle of the container, we found a space where a weapon used to be.
- Morgan must have taken something.
- So what was it? - A laser target designator.
- One of these.
This one we found in the hide, one is missing.
You pre-sight it, plant it in the ground, and then it can be triggered to guide a missile to its target.
The laser beam hits the target and causes an invisible cone to rise above it.
The missile uses the cone as a funnel to find its way to where it needs to go.
The beauty of this system is that it enables the control team that fires the missiles to remain miles out of the way.
I don't think "beauty" is the word if Number 10 went up in smoke.
Erm, rather disturbingly, this ties in with information from E-Section.
We scan the air above our cities for unusual radio activity.
Um, last week, one of our scanners picked up something strange.
An untraceable flash.
At the time we didn't know the exact cause, but it looks like it's a laser designator having a trial run.
- Where was this? - London.
This changes things completely.
If the designator has already been pre-set and tested, we can probably assume an attack is imminent.
If I was running the op, I'd bring it forward.
The information on this attack will have a shelf-life of? That's how long we've got to stop a guided missile falling in London.
Danny, you're with me in the interrogation.
Ruth, check with Echelon for any chatter and get in touch with GCHQ.
- He left his car near the weapons dump.
- You and Colin pull it apart.
- I'll get on to those three Fs.
- Start with Finance.
This guy'll have spent his life doing anti-interrogation courses.
And I've spent half my career devising them.
He'll reveal enough to keep us interested.
After three days, he can tell us anything.
By then his team will have changed plans or carried out the attacks without him.
Exactly.
This guy will hold out until his information's obsolete.
- How do you want to play this? - Let's see how co-operative he is.
And if he isn't? Your current address? That's not such an easy question to answer.
Give it a whirl.
OK There's two.
and 32 St David's Road, Hereford.
And would you prefer we call you Ken Johnson, Robert Morgan or Rick Garbut? Take your pick.
In my line of work, I need more than one name.
You know the score.
How would you describe your line of work? HE INHALES AND EXHALES Do I get a phone call? We're not holding you on a speeding charge.
We're holding you under the 2000 Terrorism Act, under which we can detain you for seven days and longer, if the friendly in-house magistrate agrees.
Which, after careful consideration of each case, he usually does.
But tell us what we want to know and you can be home in time for tea and crumpets.
At either 32 St David's Road, Hereford, with the wife Nancy, or at 43 Kenilworth Road, Derby, with the girlfriend, the lovely Lucy.
It's not a criminal offence to be having an affair.
Perhaps not.
But storing hi-tech weaponry in an old Soviet arms dump is.
- Who's running you? - Why should I say? I don't even know who you are.
If you don't co-operate, this isn't going to be nice.
Take your time.
But think very carefully about the choices you're making.
I'm afraid I'm going to have to put an additional burden your way.
Of course, Harry.
The Lord High Executioner, our Director General, is retiring at the end of the summer.
- Personal reasons.
- Exactly.
Personal reasons.
And they've asked me to apply for the position.
Well, that's great.
Congratulations.
It's not just me, there's a short list, but they want me to go for an interview.
And when they invite you, they make it very hard to say no.
But why would you want to say no? Well, when there's a mercenary using his skills to help terrorists fire a missile at central London, I'd rather be here than lounging on the seventh floor.
I can help you prepare for the interview.
Likely questions, stuff like that.
Obvious things about the future of the service, plans, failings, threats Thank you Ruth, but Not at the expense of our current operation.
And I'd appreciate it if you kept this to yourself, kept it secret.
Of course.
Isn't that what we're meant to be good at? This was just another job.
Your job was simply moving weapons from one place to another? Pretty much.
So you were just using those dumps as a place to store the weapons? - That's right.
- Guess what my next question is.
- Who was I working for? - Correct.
It isn't that different on the outside than it is here on the inside.
Working for Her Majesty's Government? You're on a job.
You don't ask about the before and after parts.
It's easier and safer, and so you just don't think about it.
Do you make any sense of that? How many arms dumps have you visited recently? Fascinating history, those places have.
Soviets built them near to British Air Force bases during the Cold War.
We did it to them, of course.
And you were one of the guys crawling around Siberia setting them up.
We know.
Look, if I were to hazard a guess as to the terms of my employment, I'd say that it was something to do with running an operation against elements with a terrorist structure.
You're saying this was a black op, that you were working for the government on a deniable operation? - It had that feel.
- OK, this is really important.
If it was, we need to know right away.
So if I knock on the door of the JIC, Six or UKN, whoever, they'll tell me exactly what's going on? - Not necessarily.
- You said it was a government operation.
- I said it had that feel.
- Then someone must know about it.
Operations don't just appear out of nowhere.
At my end of the ladder we don't ask.
I've been involved in a number of operations whose - what did my old colonel like to call it? - whose provenance was unclear.
You jump out a plane at night with 120lbs strapped to your feet, knowing that when you land there'll be people trying to kill you.
You don't have time to worry who dreamt it up.
- Stop.
- What? I've already warned you about this.
You're just talking this into the ground.
- We won't get bored and go away.
- I'm saying I'm just a private contractor.
- Who counter-signed your contract? - What contract? You're not doing this for charity.
Someone with your expertise is being paid a lot, and I don't believe that you don't know who's paying.
That depends on the nature of the operation.
The more deniable it is, the more everyone involved has to be overqualified, even for the most mundane job.
I was just doing the heavy lifting.
Morgan's bank statements make interesting reading.
- He earns a lot and likes to spend it.
- Our first option is to offer money.
If he's stupid enough to turn that down, we'll start asset stripping.
He's a mercenary.
Let's try and do a deal with him first.
He definitely knows what's going on, so why isn't he telling us? When we discover that, we're on our way to finding out what this is all about.
What's in it for him? - Belief? - Give me a break.
- Money, then.
- OK, let's go after that.
Danny, offer him the deal.
If he doesn't take it, get his signature and we'll drain his accounts.
You OK? Of course.
I like this stuff.
Just remember what it's like on the other side.
I'm not likely to forget.
You should be prepared to answer questions on four main areas - the state of readiness of the service, your character and operational experience and, most importantly, the nature of the present threat and how far do we go to combat it? How far do we go in all senses? "Is there anything we shouldn't be doing?" Yes, I like that.
How about the other candidates? Do we know who they are? Of course not.
Nor, Ruth, could I openly approve of anyone trying to find them out.
- But if a list of them happened? - To find its way onto my desk? Then I'd have to send it back to its rightful owner, unopened.
When you've got your circulation back, I'd like you to sign for your belongings.
Where's my car? We're having it valeted.
Help yourself.
Thanks, but I'm not hungry.
- Something wrong? - No.
OK, look at this from my perspective.
We find you next to an old Soviet arms dump full of new kit.
In fact, so new that my technical guys think Christmas has come early, and still you claim that you're just the water carrier.
I've told you all that I know.
We know how much you guys get paid if a job like this works out.
Just tell us what this is about and we'll match that figure.
We'll make sure you're not prosecuted and you're compensated to the full amount.
- What's this? - A deal for you to sign.
You don't believe me? OK, well, as you know, this is all being taped, and if you still have doubts, we'll get in that lawyer you asked for - a witness, anyone you like.
OK, you've done anti-interrogation stuff.
We all know how this works - you'll have to give us something.
This is the best way of doing it.
Still not hungry? - No.
- OK.
Just tell us the nature of this operation, and that deal still stands whenever you want.
OK, I know you guys have a rather sniffy attitude to the Security Services, because you're the glory boys, aren't you? I mean, we can't run up a hill carrying a tree trunk or score 20 out of 20 on the pop-gun range.
But then, we always find people to do that for us.
What we are capable of is a very different type of operation - in your case, making sure that no area of your life goes uncontaminated.
Everything that you have worked to achieve we can unravel, and if you don't believe me, just watch.
- I'll get the signature to Ruth to deal with.
- Good.
I'm dangling carrots and he's not biting.
We need to up the ante.
Let's put a siren loop in there.
Are you sure about that? The more we turn up the heat, the more effective your role becomes, Danny.
Let's put him in the stress position and have a guard on him 24 hours, then I'll go in and give him the bad news about his money.
I know what he's thinking.
I know exactly what's going through his head.
How come? It's just one of the things I know.
SIREN BLARES The human ear is most sensitive to that exact pitch.
So it drives you slowly insane and can lead to complete hearing loss.
Isn't that called torture? I have accessed a list of all Morgan's deposits and withdrawals.
Well, if he's clever he'll have deposited all the cash in small amounts.
Exactly.
Thanks, Ruth.
Small amounts of money found in Morgan's numerous bank accounts can be traced back to one large deposit.
£100,000 was credited to an account belonging to Ken Johnson, one of Morgan's pseudonyms, in Saffron Walden on the 31st of last month.
Any tie-up? Oh, yes.
Instructions were received that day to go to Saffron Walden from - A private bank in the City.
- Good.
Find out whose account that money came from.
We've traced the account to a subsidiary of Anglo-West African Oil.
An oil company? A laser designator? It doesn't add up.
The payment trail is well hidden.
It's not the kind of business strategy likely to be announced in the annual report.
Multi-nationals have long used people like Morgan for protection and security in their installations abroad.
Still, we can't overlook anything.
Ruth? Anglo-West African is bidding for a pipeline contract across the lvory Coast which could provide 30% of the world's supplies, bypassing any reliance on the Middle East, and Her Majesty's Government is paying for the pipeline with taxpayer's money.
We need to get somebody at Anglo to tell us what's going on.
I've a list of executives we might recruit.
Subject to the usual array of human failings, I trust.
- I prefer to use more positive aspects.
- Each to their own.
OK, I think Morgan will be softened up enough by now.
I'll get back in there.
Just like to say how glad we are to have you staying with us at Five.
We're lucky to have you.
I'll need Malcolm to organise me a pool car.
Of course.
Nothing too special.
What were you doing? You must have seen me coming! - Sorry, I just didn't - What do you think mirrors are for? I don't know the insurance company or anything.
My husband looks after all that.
But let me give you my card.
Got a pen? I'll write my registration number on it.
Thanks.
Sorry.
Well, here's my card and my insurers.
Will you be OK getting back? I live just off the Wellington Road, if it's any help Look, I want it repaired.
Just call me with the details.
Sure.
Sorry! Juliet Taylor.
38, lefty at university - classic sell-out.
Had three crashes in the last year, which is why I thought a car accident was the best form of introduction.
Good.
She'll want to settle informally rather than through the insurers.
- How did she take it? - Not very gracefully.
Though she'll still have to meet me if she wants her money.
- Is she the right person? - Number two to the Director of Finance.
Weak spots? Her daughter, Mattie, who she's desperate to get into the local posh school.
Use that - although it could take time.
We need to find a more immediate way.
Also, I need somewhere to meet her.
Our place is still a bit of a tip.
- Use Danny's flat.
- Won't he mind? No.
Why should he? Harry! I'd like to ask about your strengths and weaknesses.
Haven't you noticed we're under some pressure? Which is why this is just the right time.
Do you think the end always justifies the means in an operation? I would review each case on its individual merits.
Isn't it better not to procrastinate? Makes you sound like a politician.
Perhaps they want a politician.
But you said you didn't want the job, you want to be in touch at ground level.
Do you think you always do? I think my strengths are I hold onto certain things I feel are important and good.
I'm referring to a certain ethical dimension to our work.
We won't defeat terrorism by destroying democracy.
Mm.
That's all very high-minded, but in practice what does that mean? Does it mean results aren't everything? You draw the line somewhere, don't you? I think that's enough for now, Ruth.
I'm just enabling you to fail gracefully, as requested.
For which I will be eternally grateful.
Hypothetically, Harry, you wouldn't forget about us, would you? When you're pacing the thickly carpeted floor of your new office? I didn't know I paced, Ruth.
Only in a good way.
What? Nothing.
Four years ago, I was taken prisoner in the Yemen by a group I was working with.
I was undercover as an aid-worker.
How long did they hold you for? Long enough.
And? Did they torture me? Yes, they did.
- And? - And nothing.
That's what they did.
You got your bottle? We have to move it up a gear.
SIREN STOPS What's the target? This will go on until you tell me.
The physical stuffs just a sideshow, you'll get over that.
This other stuff This will be with you forever.
We've got into your accounts Paid a visit to your bank.
Thank you, by the way, for your signature.
You've been well paid recently, but this morning, with our help, you donated all your savings to charity.
That includes the £200,000 you hid from the revenue in your private bank account in Geneva.
Maybe if you're lucky, they'll name a ward after you in some godforsaken hospital in the Sudan.
What? Think I'm bluffing? You think you can always make it back again, working for one of your old mates? In about 15 minutes, you're going to seriously regret that.
Shit.
Yeah.
Yeah, there'll be a lot of that.
Take this now.
Drink it before it gets worse.
There's an antidote in here.
It'll be effective in 10 minutes.
And if you're bullshitting me? Fine.
Don't tell me anything until you're better.
Look, I'll throw in the money as well.
What more can I say? What is it with you? Why are you making your life so impossible? You have about five minutes before it gets really nasty.
Just remember, you brought this on yourself.
Did we need to make him so sick? Did he need to aim a missile at London? There's no comparison.
Why is he resisting so hard? Have you asked yourself that? Yes.
All the time.
He must have some very good reason, and it doesn't seem to be money.
What's our next step? Let's continue with friends.
Then I'll get very specific about the laser designator.
Then he'll know he's close to the finishing post.
I can make that seem like a long way away.
- I haven't got long.
- Sure.
I've spoken to my husband about the insurance and I have the details.
It's just that he's a bit worried about our no-claims bonus.
I'm not thrilled at the prospect of having to talk to mine.
Would you be happy to settle in cash? That would suit me fine.
You've got my address.
- You'll drop it round? - Of course.
That's no problem.
My daughter's school is just round the corner - Trinity House.
Really? I want to send my little girl there, but everybody keeps saying how impossible it is to get in.
Oh, you know, there are ways.
As with everything.
I mean, I'm on the PTA.
If there's anything I can do to help I'm not sure I could No, really, it's the least I can do, considering the damage I've done.
Why don't I drop by your place? Great, yeah.
I'll tidy up.
OK, you get out of here - broke, but in one piece.
Are you listening to me, because I'm predicting your future here for you? Nod if you can hear me.
The one glimmer of light that you can see is that all the people you work with, all the old boys from the army, all your friends, you think they'll stick with you, help you back on your feet.
But what if we tamper with your military records? My guess is that'll make you virtually unemployable.
Let's say Let's say that you exaggerated your success in the army Let's say your main claim to fame turned out to be a series of botched operations, where you were negligent of your men and cowardly in the face of enemy fire.
The men I served with will know that's a load of old bollocks.
Let's have a look at the people you served with and who you now work with in the private security business.
All their companies have a very important relationship, apart from the one with you - the one that they enjoy with Her Majesty's Government.
Us.
Or, at the moment me.
Now, if we present your friends with a choice: "By all means use Morgan, "but if you do, you'll never work on another government contract again", what do you think they'll do? Is their loyalty going to be to the good old days or will it be the future of their companies, themselves, their families? - I know who my friends are.
- Oh, they'll still be your friends.
They just won't be offering you more work - not if they want to stay solvent.
You know why? Because they won't be getting any more business from us.
What's in this for you? I mean, look at you.
You haven't slept or eaten for 36 hours, your guts are shot to pieces.
The longer you say nothing, the more I know you're hiding something really big.
What's the operation? What's the target? If it's the money, the money's all gone.
So what's it for? The old days? All your colleagues who are destined to have a black strip over their eyes in one of those kiss-and-tell books with flames on the outside that you lot keep writing? What are you so frightened of? What they'll do to you? Is that it? Is that it? All that martial arts, unarmed combat, "Jap-slapping" or whatever you call it, and that's all you can manage? I know what you're thinking.
If I can hold out another 24 hours, another 36 If I can hold out that long I know what you've trained yourself to think about, because I devised the course.
We know you're using a laser designator.
Ah.
That got your attention.
Now, tell me what the target is and when you're planning the attack or I'll make things so bad that everything that's happened in the last few hours will seem like a pleasant memory.
I think he's more frightened of what his friends will do to him than he is of us.
I'm not so sure about that.
Look, I think it's time we moved to the third F.
Family.
Perhaps we should've just started with family.
I always hope we won't have to go there.
But sometimes we have no choice and we have to behave worse than them.
You mean create the impression that we're capable of behaving worse.
Or just behave worse.
Otherwise, we're not going to be able to find out what we need to find out.
Don't you see what the danger is here?! What, that something blows up in London? No, that we turn into them, the people we're fighting.
People like Morgan.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a danger.
But at the moment, I can't see any alternative.
I'm going home to wash.
When you do your interrogations, do you ever think about what happened to you? Yes.
Do you think that's a good thing? An effective thing, maybe - I know how they think.
Do you ever sympathise with him? We're not the same.
He's a traitor who'll use his skills to kill innocent people in return for money.
Still, aren't some things just wrong? - Like torture.
- I wouldn't call this torture.
I wouldn't call this torture yet at all, but I'll let you know when we get there.
Friends and finance aren't working.
I'm worried that when Adam moves to family, things could get nasty.
- We need something from Juliet Taylor.
- My new best friend.
Good.
Get her to tell us why Anglo-West African Oil are paying Morgan.
I'm on it.
I see the covert-entry boys are doing their work on Morgan's life.
Harry, is there any area that we don't touch? - Ethics? Here? - I'm serious.
Say to do with his family.
Morgan's daughter, Mary.
She's eight.
She needs a liver transplant.
They're looking for a donor.
She has her mother's surname.
That's why we didn't find it before.
Look, he calls her all the time.
I mean, it's possible that I just never came across this particular piece of information.
Cos you don't trust what Adam might do with it? We don't know where this is all going.
Though we do know that it's nothing to do with the sick daughter.
You don't think she's got enough on her plate? I mean, do you never draw the line on this stuff? - Where's your little girl? - She's staying with her gran for the week.
I think this is all of it.
Thank you for doing this.
You were at Manchester? - My husband was.
He loved it.
- So did I.
I did political science, which at the time was a hotbed of radicalism.
Funny how your life changes.
Now I find myself working for, of all things, an oil company.
What do you think about that? Well, a big mortgage to pay tends to sharpen the senses a little.
- MOBILE RINGS - Oh, sorry.
I really need to take this.
Can I use your hall? - Sure.
- Thanks.
'Tom's at the rugby and Mattie's playing with a friend.
We'll have a couple of hours.
MAN: Where are you? 'Trying to sort out this nightmare with the car, but I'm only five minutes away.
- MAN: I'll be waiting.
- 'Dying to see you.
' Sorry about that.
My mum.
She's not been well recently.
- Oh, dear.
- Well, you do what you can.
You know how it is.
What do you think? - Potentially, it's dynamite.
- My thoughts exactly.
- But we should - Save it until the end? Until we really need it.
What's the worst we can do with this information? Remove the daughter from the donor list or something more immediate? Put her in danger? What I like about you is you never say the "imagine if it was your daughter" stuff.
Imaginative compassion is a good thing, but it's not always useful in this job.
The father-daughter relationship's strong.
Seems he's paid for all the treatment.
They haven't got insurance, but he's taken her private.
- And the mother? - Remarried.
Other children.
He's a good father.
Better than most.
- Who found this stuff? - Ruth.
She can't have been happy about the uses we might put it to.
I think she very nearly didn't show me at all.
HE SLURS I just get paid, I've told you.
I don't know where the money comes from.
Let me give you a clue.
Does Anglo-West African Oil mean anything to you? - Well, I've heard of it.
- Oh, come off it! That's the company you're working for.
Look, you've done enough.
We're impressed.
Now, give yourself a break.
We found out who pays you, and we've been transferring your money to all your favourite charities, particularly Save The Children.
Which, with such a sick daughter, must be a cause close to your heart.
You know how this works.
You know what the next stage is, don't you? Family.
Do you want us to go there? Your daughter Hasn't she got enough to deal with without you dragging her through all this? Look at him.
You probably think this has been a classic good-cop-bad-cop routine, don't you? If even my colleague doesn't know how far I'm prepared to go .
.
how comfortable are you feeling right now? You know I'm not speaking to you officially, Harry.
I've gathered that.
Your sudden desire to take in the view was a bit of a giveaway.
I'm just pointing out that Adam's background means - His experiences in the Middle East? - Yes.
- Make me make me worried about - How far he'll go? Well, it's not so much that as the fact that he loses himself in this.
It's like he's paying Morgan back for what happened to him.
I feel awful going behind his back like this.
What with all the urgency We have to find a more informal way.
Is there anything specific I can do? Anything that would help? I suppose it's the daughter I feel most uneasy about.
If it was possible, I'd like you to call that one, before we directly involve her.
OK.
I don't have a problem with that.
I was simply trying to keep you above it all.
So much for deniability! I did say that, but I'm willing to take my share of the responsibility, so I suppose now I'm saying something different.
- You're not going to weaken on me? - I've never been known to.
Fi, you have to close on her.
He's still holding out on us.
I can't appeal to Juliet's lefty past.
There's no ethical dimension to her life.
But she's having an affair.
Blackmail her.
She tells us who Morgan's working for or we tell her husband.
How do you know this? I listened to a conversation she had with her lover.
And then I followed her and saw them.
Blackmail's not healthy for a long-term relationship with a source, but it can be highly effective in the short term.
We all do things we'd rather not.
You bitch.
Anglo-West African Oil is employing someone called Robert Morgan.
- I want you to find out what he's doing.
- I can't access information like that.
- I think you can.
- What do you mean? - Why would they talk to me? - I wanted this to be amicable.
I strongly suggest that you help us and then everything will be forgotten.
Forgotten? What are you talking about? Some of us have principles that don't include spying on our own companies.
How do you sleep at night? Not as well as you - especially after your long afternoons with your friend Simon.
Or do your principles include screwing around behind your husband's back? I want that information.
And I want it this afternoon.
- Tell me.
- I never betray my team.
You will.
We'll make sure there's no fallout from the people you work with.
How are you gonna do that? By making it look like we discovered all this another way.
You know about this shit, don't you? What do you mean? I mean, you know.
Not just from training.
You've been through this, haven't you? - A lot worse.
- Thought so.
And I'm prepared to go there again just to show you what it's like.
'Robert Morgan is employed by Anglo-West African Oil.
' Yes, that much we know.
It's why you're in this awkward position.
He's paid by a department called External Development, who look into any opposition to our plans for strategic growth.
Things like the pipeline contract? - Opposition from African countries? - Eventually.
- But also - Rivals for the contract.
That's it, isn't it? I don't know any more than that.
Who are you calling? Your home.
I've got tapes as well.
If your husband sees how much more you enjoy yourself with your afternoon lover OK.
External Development is mostly concerned with our rivals over the African pipeline contract - the Oil and Petroleum Corporation.
All I know is that something major is planned.
Something that will remove them as a player.
- Please, I've told you everything.
- I'm not calling your husband.
I'm calling mine.
Anglo-West African are going to use Morgan's team to guide a missile onto the HQ of their biggest rival? But make it look like a terrorist attack.
- Where's the missile coming from? - We don't know.
Clear the building to minimise casualties.
We can't have bombs raining down on us.
We must find that designator.
- What will you do? - Take Morgan on a boat trip.
Danny, I need your help.
You're gonna take someone on a short tour of an oil company headquarters.
Better not be who I think it is.
Where's the designator and the rest of your team? A laser beam is targeting a bomb onto that building there, just as you planned.
Why don't you take a look, see where your bomb's going to land when your mission is successful? We told your daughter that this was a special sightseeing trip that you'd organised for her to apologise for not being in contact recently.
She thinks she's going to meet you there.
Where's the designator? I'll need a new identity.
For me and my family.
Can you guarantee my safety? Danny, leave her.
Leave the girl and get out of there.
Half a mile downstream, attached to the embankment wall just before Waterloo Bridge.
And the team with the launcher? She's still up there.
Crystal Palace.
The park.
Rock's Hill's entrance.
Now, get her out of there.
Danny, you can bring her down now.
You know I'm a dead man, don't you? They'll find me wherever I go.
That's what it does to you, doesn't it? What? The realisation that there are no depths to which you wouldn't sink.
Because of what happened to you before.
And you will always carry it with you.
Just you wait When they kick you out, you'll be just like me.
Out on the open market, and there's people who'd pay a lot to employ a private contractor like you.
You going to put in a good word for me? I serve my country, not the highest bidder.
You remember what that was like? Don't try and dignify what you do with all that stuff about private contractors.
Call it by it's real name.
You're a mercenary.
Is there anything you don't do? Does the present climate put anything off limits, or does the end always justify the means? I certainly believe that as chief of an organisation, you can't be involved in every decision, but you can set the tone for what is and isn't acceptable.
And on what isn't, is there a line that you don't cross? Definitely.
What was it Patton said about being permitted to walk with the devil to enable you to cross the bridge? But the end can never justify the means entirely.
You have to be smarter than that, otherwise what are we defending, what are we fighting for? You spoke about your job as one of defending democracy from all sides.
Apart from the obvious ones, what other threats were you thinking of? It's too easy to always look abroad, to think that's where the main danger lies.
- We need to look closer to home.
- Give me a "for instance".
I believe corporate access to the higher reaches of government is far too easy and that a lot of foreign policy stems from the boardrooms of our multi-nationals.
But hasn't it always been this way? And surely these are just theoretical threats? No, they are not.
These people will stop at nothing to get their way.
It's difficult to set your own limits when dealing with those people, to resist behaving like they do.
It's not always easy.
Did you use the daughter? I had no choice.
- I'm sorry you had to do that.
- Yes, so am I.
Made a decision about these colours? Well, what about these two? Cobalt blue or azure? They both look the same to me.
Yeah, well, they're not.
Well, here's another cobalt blue, but it's different.
I mean, how do I know? There must be a book or something that tells you what colour cobalt blue really is, gives you a definitive colour.
I think you're taking this truth thing a bit too far.
Stop being so literal-minded.
This is home.
It's real life.
There has to be a benchmark, so everyone knows what they're doing.
I think we can leave the paints for a while.
I'm just saying, how can I decide if I can't tell the difference? I know.
I can see that.
I'm sorry.
Come on.
Come on, let's go get a drink.
I feel like we need to be surrounded by people we don't know.
TV: 'Business news.
Anglo-West African Oil has taken a huge hit as its share price tumbled by 40%.
'The London stock market is predicting further falls in the next few days following news that the company has been unsuccessful in its bid for a significant pipeline contract across the lvory Coast.
'The company's managing director resigned today' See? Wrongs righted, evildoers brought to heel, miracles performed.
Is there no end to our goodness, Ruth? I got down to the final two, and then they parachuted a late contender into the job.
But that's what you wanted.
Yes, but it's annoying when the best man for the job is passed over for a politician.
- It seems you were right.
- Yes.
But I'm pleased.
Yeah, well, I'm not.
There's a scratch on the floor of my flat.
Seems the removal men weren't careful enough after Fiona moved out.
My point exactly.
I wouldn't be involved with these crucial issues if I were DG.
Set Adam on the removal men.
He'll get to the bottom of it if anyone will.
- Off out, are we, Ruth? - Yes.
I'm only three days late.
And if anything happens between here and the pods, please don't tell me.
- Ruth? - I'm not listening.
You have brought chaos and anarchy to Iraq.
Today we will hold you to account.
They're not civilians.
It does make the moral dilemma somewhat less acute.
I will be burned alive together with my spy colleague.
One of them will be executed and you have to chose which one.
They're gonna kill us.
- Tell me where they're holding my wife.
- I can't.
GUNSHOT Oh, my God!