Spies Like Us

Ian Fleming’s James Bond embodies the popular image of a British secret agent: suave, sophisticated, Oxbridge educated, and quietly recruited over a glass of sherry. That’s an image that MI6, Britain’s equivalent of the CIA, wants to dispel in order to recruit people from more diverse backgrounds. To accomplish that, the British agency launched its ...

Ian Fleming's James Bond embodies the popular image of a British secret agent: suave, sophisticated, Oxbridge educated, and quietly recruited over a glass of sherry. That's an image that MI6, Britain's equivalent of the CIA, wants to dispel in order to recruit people from more diverse backgrounds. To accomplish that, the British agency launched its first Web site, mi6.gov.uk, last fall. The site has profiles of several foreign-born agents and is available in six different languages, including Arabic.

Ian Fleming’s James Bond embodies the popular image of a British secret agent: suave, sophisticated, Oxbridge educated, and quietly recruited over a glass of sherry. That’s an image that MI6, Britain’s equivalent of the CIA, wants to dispel in order to recruit people from more diverse backgrounds. To accomplish that, the British agency launched its first Web site, mi6.gov.uk, last fall. The site has profiles of several foreign-born agents and is available in six different languages, including Arabic.

The CIA accepts applications online, but it refuses to discuss the relative success of its site. The British aren’t as coy. Nev Johnson, a Foreign Office spokesman, boasts that there is "already a diversification in people actually applying."

Even Hollywood appears to be getting the message. The new Bond actor, Daniel Craig, may be a white male, but he also hails from working-class Liverpool. If MI6 has its way, his successor might just be from Lahore, not London.

James Forsyth is assistant editor at Foreign Policy.

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