Leadership CONNECT:21-Dec-2025 (Y25W52)

Greetings, AI Thinkers,

As we approach the release of MindLi 2.2 in Q1 2026, I’ve found myself spending less time in the code and more time in the “context.” Building a tool to empower human thinking requires more than just clean menus and balanced colors; it requires a deep understanding of the world our users will inhabit.

Last week, I discovered a text that seemed written specifically for this mission. It wasn’t a tech roadmap or a market analysis—it was the first major address by Blaise Metreweli, the Head of MI6.

I spent 45 minutes immersed in her arguments, and I can tell you: they are formidable.

She speaks of a world being remade by technology, but anchored by something much more powerful: Human Agency. In a landscape of shifting global powers and algorithmic noise, her vision for 2026 provides the exact clarity we need as we build for the future.

Below, I’ve shared my highlights and reflections from her speech. Whether you’re a developer, a strategist, or simply someone curious about how we stay human in a tech-mediated world, this is required reading.

Join me as we deconstruct this eloquent address and prepare to shape the world as it will be in 2026.

Let me also wish us all Happy Holidays. We will return in Jan for more human agency thinking.

Let’s Think,

Dr. Yesha Sivan and the MindLi Team

P.S. Feedback? Email me.

2026 Mission: Human Agency — I spent 45 minutes with the Head of MI6, and her arguments are formidable (Source: Yesha On Human Thinking)

Visual 1: From Blaise Metreweli's Speech (Mirror at YouTube).

Preamble

Last week, I was looking for my 2026 message to myself and the world. As many of my readers know, at MindLi, we are in the final mile to release 2.2 in 2026 Q1. So, between fine-tuning the menus, balancing the colors, and fixing the feed mode, I spend a few hours defining the larger context of what we do. Luckily, I stumbled upon a text that felt written for me. Actually, a text for all of us, if we are looking to improve the human condition.

In an eloquent 45-minute speech, Blaise Metreweli, chief of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), gave her first major speech on December 15th. I “spent” 45 minutes listening to her, then reread her speech and highlighted the key messages.

Blaise Metreweli is a career intelligence officer who joined the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) in 1999. Her professional trajectory was significantly shaped by her upbringing as a “third-culture kid” in Hong Kong during the late colonial era.

Growing up amidst the territory’s high-stakes transition, she developed an early fascination with how global powers and local identities intersect—a perspective she later refined while studying Anthropology at Pembroke College, Cambridge.

Before being appointed as the first female ‘C’, she undertook a wide range of high-risk operational roles across the Middle East and Europe. Most recently, she served as Director General for Technology and Innovation, famously known as ‘Q’, where she pioneered the Service’s shift toward data-driven intelligence and AI-augmented tradecraft.

Editorial Note: How to best ‘spend’ your time

While the YouTube video {1}, courtesy of the UK Mirror, is impressive and well-suited for direct viewing or listening while you drive or walk 🙂 — it is the text itself that allows deeper reflection, digestion, and ultimately impact. I highly recommend reading it (perhaps after viewing or listening to the speech). 

I have used an external tool to grab the text, and it did a great job. I also took the liberty of adding headings to the sections of the speech and highlighting the key words, ideas, and sentences that I connected with most. This is my way of active reading. I invite you to do the same. 

Welcome

Welcome inside MI6. This iconic building, familiar to movie fans everywhere, is the home of Britain’s Foreign Intelligence Service.

But whilst hundreds of my team pass through the entry pods every day, the truth is that most of our work happens many miles away from this place, out of sight, hidden from the world, undercover, recruiting and running agents who choose to place their trust in us, sharing secrets to make the UK and the world safer.

You might pass one of our officers on the streets or sit next to them on a plane when you’re about to set off on an adventure of your own or in a foreign city, taking selfies by the sights.

Whether it’s in seemingly everyday places or on the front line embedded with our military, MI6 is there. In my first few weeks, I’ve heard repeatedly that MI6 is trusted and respected globally. Two things that we never take for granted.

We are seen as a source of hard power, soft influence, and rapid innovation. I’ve also heard that people want to believe in MI6. It’s my job to make sure they can.

The Goal: Human Agency

Today I want to talk about human agency. We all have choices about how we address the undercurrents shaping our world. About how, in our new, faster, more dangerous, and technology-mediated world, it will be our rediscovery of our shared humanity, our ability to listen, and our courage that will determine how our future unfolds.

Conflict is not inevitable. Understanding human nature is in my bones. From a family shaped by devastating conflict, I grew up with a deep sense of gratitude for the UK’s precious democracy and freedom. I spent much of my childhood overseas, which is where my passion for travel and adventure began. I studied anthropology and later psychology and AI, exploring how we make sense of the world and each other.

It’s why I was drawn to MI6. It offers strong purpose, a chance to serve, and a belief in the positive power of human connection. Like the service, I am operational to my very core. Over nearly three decades, my career has involved recruiting and running agents in hostile territory and leading operations in war zones to diffuse threats and support peace.

Always in teams, always learning from others. Over the years, I’ve worked with hundreds of brilliant partners and indeed occasionally those we’d label as adversaries across dozens of countries, tackling weapons proliferation and terrorism. During my time at MI5, I saw up close what it takes to defend Britain from being targeted by hostile states.

You’ll find many like me in my organization, powerfully motivated to protect our precious country, curious about how our world is changing, joining dots, and taking action across domains.

The Role of Technology

But it was in my last role as Q, where it was our job to turn emerging technologies from threats to opportunities, that I could see the world changing. As I dug deep into data and extraordinary innovation, I could see how technology was rapidly reshaping not just our capabilities but also conflict and trust, truth and global power.

Let me lay out how I see the global issues MI6 must tackle because the greatest danger we face is to misunderstand the nature of the problem. Let’s be in no doubt. Our world is more dangerous and contested now than it has been for decades. Conflict is evolving, and trust is eroding just as new technologies spur both competition and dependence.

We are being contested from sea to space, from the battlefield to the boardroom, and even our brains as disinformation manipulates our understanding of each other and ourselves. Across the globe, we are now confronting not one single danger, but an interlocking web of security challenges: military, technological, social, ethical—each shaping the other in complex ways.

We are now operating in a space between peace and war. This is not a temporary state or a gradual, inevitable evolution. Our world is being actively remade with profound implications for national and international security. Institutions that were designed in the ashes of the Second World War are being challenged.

New blocks and identities are forming, and alliances are reshaping. Multipolar competition is in tension with multilateral cooperation. But there’s something distinctive that will make this change unlike any other: the impact of advanced technologies, which will accelerate the pace and scale of every threat and opportunity and increasingly individualize them too.

Advances in artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and quantum computing are not only revolutionizing economies but rewriting the reality of conflict as they converge to create science fiction-like tools. There’s incredible promise in all of this for all of us, from green technologies to hyperpersonalized medicine, but also peril.

AI-powered robots and drones are brilliant for scaled manufacturing, but devastating on the battlefield. Discoveries that cure disease can also create new weapons. And as states race for tech supremacy, or as some algorithms become as powerful as states, those hyperpersonalized tools could become a new vector for conflict and control.

Power itself is becoming more diffuse, more unpredictable, as control over these technologies is shifting from states to corporations and sometimes to individuals. And at the same time, the foundations of trust in our societies are eroding.

Information, once a unifying force, is increasingly weaponized. Falsehood spreads faster than fact, dividing communities and distorting reality. We live in an age of hyperconnection yet profound isolation. The algorithms flatter our biases and fracture our public squares. And as trust collapses, so does our shared sense of truth—one of the greatest losses a society can suffer.

The defining challenge of the 21st century is not simply who wields the most powerful technologies, but who guides them with the greatest wisdom. Our security, our prosperity, and our humanity depend on it.

Our world is being remade, and for the first time, we are all at its heart. My service must now operate in this new context, too. Not just an expert on hostile states, terrorism, and proliferation, but also fluent in technology, able to anticipate the second and third-order effects of advances that reshape the world in minutes, not months.

And as China will be a central part of the global transformation taking place this century, it’s essential that we, as MI6, continue to inform the government’s understanding of China’s rise and the implications for UK national security.

Putin

I’m going to break with tradition, and I won’t give you a global threat tour, but I will focus here on Putin’s Russia. We all continue to face the menace of an aggressive expansionist and revisionist Russia seeking to subjugate Ukraine and harass NATO. I find it harrowing that hundreds of thousands have died, with the toll mounting every day, because of Putin’s historical distortions and his compromised desire for respect.

He is dragging out negotiations and shifting the cost of war onto his own population. But Putin should be in no doubt. Our support is enduring. The pressure we apply on Ukraine’s behalf will be sustained because it is fundamental not just to European sovereignty and security, but to global stability.

Alongside the grinding war, Russia is testing us in the gray zone with tactics that are just below the threshold of war. It’s important to understand their attempts to bully, fearmonger, and manipulate because it affects us all.

I’m talking about cyber attacks on critical infrastructure, drones buzzing airports and bases, aggressive activity in our seas above and below the waves, state-sponsored arson and sabotage, propaganda and influence operations that crack open and exploit fractures within societies. Countering this activity is the work of intelligence and security services across Europe and the globe.

As the Foreign Secretary made clear in a speech last week, the UK is defending itself against this Russian information warfare, sanctioning Russian media outlets pushing Kremlin narratives. The export of chaos is a feature, not a bug, in this Russian approach to international engagement, and we should be ready for this to continue until Putin is forced to change his calculus.

UK Answer

So how should we respond? It’s not enough now just to understand the world. We must shape it too. MI6 is well-positioned to respond to these threats and wider global instability, and we will continue to evolve just as we have throughout our long history.

The UK government has invested in our intelligence agencies, and we are all using our unique powers to keep the British people safe. Our open and connected partnerships across the UK intelligence community with HMGCC, NSIF, and the wider tech ecosystem in the UK will become even more important because, in the digital battleground, no single organization can prevail alone.

As a global agency, MI6’s inbuilt strength is our partners and our people. The risks I’ve set out require us to work ever more closely with our colleagues in MI5, GCHQ, and in defense and diplomacy, but also with our Five Eyes partners with the E3, the EU, NATO, those across the Middle East, the Indo-Pacific, and beyond, and with many valued partners whose identity needs to remain secret.

Together, we integrate our diverse talent, data, and tools to meet the threat. AI is a domain in which we will excel using the technology to augment, not replace, our human skills. Every digital trace, every byte of data, every algorithmic decision has implications for the safety of the lives of the courageous people who work with us as officers and agents and for the UK’s strategic advantage.

Mastery of technology will infuse everything we do, not just in our labs, but in the field, in our tradecraft, and even more importantly, in the mindset of every officer. We will become as comfortable with lines of code as we are with human sources, as fluent in Python as we are in multiple other languages.

Under my leadership, MI6 will continue to attract Britain’s best and most creative minds: linguists and data scientists, case officers and engineers, behavioral experts and technologists. We need people who walk in the shoes and get in the heads of our adversaries. We need people who think differently, challenge assumptions, and act decisively.

All can thrive and make a difference. At MI6, at an operational level, we will sharpen our edge and impact with audacity, tapping into our historical SOE instincts. We’re at our best when we’re hustling to make things happen because our intelligence is most valuable when it changes reality on the ground.

We will take calculated risks where the prize is significant and the national interest clear. We will never stoop to the tactics of our opponents. But we must seek to outplay them in every domain, in every way.

So intelligence must drive action. Action must deliver advantage. And advantage must serve Britain’s security and prosperity.

The Core Mission: How We Unlock Human Agency

But at the core, our deeper contribution is also our simplest: how we unlock human agency. Our fast-paced tech and threat-fused world now generates more heat than light. As nations retrench and rearm, we are losing opportunities to listen to what’s really going on.

I’ve seen time and again through my career that this is where MI6 matters most. We listen, and we hear. We understand because we take time to learn languages and cultures, complex technical and historical detail, and immerse ourselves in what’s really driving the situation.

Across the globe right now, our officers are finding people with the courage to step forward, and they’re taking time to sit and listen to break these tightening cycles of violence. They listen for nuance, for connection, for opportunity.

Over the years, I’ve listened to terrorists who have told us how to diffuse the bomb because they know that more violence won’t help. To proliferators and smugglers who’ve told us where to find dangerous material, motivated to protect their children’s future. To people trapped in authoritarian regimes who know deep down that their humanity is being chipped away and that telling us what’s really going on is an important release, allowing us all to find better ways to navigate our changing world.

So, we will work with our agents, and we will continue to engage directly and with respect for states and organizations currently working against us. Away from the glare of the media, we will use MI6’s convening power wherever we can to make a material difference, bringing parties together to diffuse tensions.

But the response to the increasing risks we face won’t be delivered by the UK intelligence community alone. Wider society has a role to play, too. That includes work taking place in schools across the country, so our children don’t get duped by information manipulation.

Let’s all check sources, consider evidence, and be alive to those algorithms that trigger intense reactions like fear. It also means everyone in society really understands the world we’re in. A world where terrorists plot against us. Where our enemies fearmonger, bully, and manipulate. And the front line is everywhere: online, on our streets, in our supply chains, in the minds, and on the screens of our citizens.

We must all stand together against this, as we do today with our friends in Australia after the shocking anti-semitic terrorist attack this weekend. My thoughts and those of my whole organization are with the family, friends, and loved ones of the victims. Light will always win over darkness.

In rising to meet these challenges, we in MI6 will remain anchored to our values: courage, creativity, respect, and integrity—and to our principles. Accountability and trust are not constraints on our work. They are the foundations of our legitimacy with the British public.

Recently, I had the privilege of meeting and thanking a foreign agent who has worked with us for decades, taking extraordinary risks to help keep the UK safe. I asked why, and they said simply, “Your values, your integrity, and respect. None of us has a future without them.” This moment reinforced to me that we must remain a very human agency.

And so to sustain that trust, MI6 will continue to be more open—not for the sake of visibility, but because it matters. And as my MI5 counterpart, Ken McCallum, said recently, it is a strength. We will continue the practice of speaking publicly, broaden our channels of engagement, and sustain our focus on attracting the most diverse talent to join our service.

Transparency does not mean revealing what must remain secret. It means showing the British people who we are, what we stand for, and why our work matters. We need your trust and support for the difficult and often dangerous work our agents pursue every day of the year.

In an age of uncertainty, one constant remains: the choices made by human beings still determine the shape of the world. Yes, technology can illuminate possibilities, but information requires judgment. Complexity demands clarity, and only people can decide which path to follow.

The United Kingdom’s global voice has never rested solely on strength. It has rested on trust, principle, and the ability to understand others as well as ourselves. That is also the essence of intelligence: not simply knowing the world, but interpreting it through a uniquely human lens.

Ours is the quiet service, the hidden service. It is one rooted in a profound belief that when human beings act with purpose and integrity, they can steady a faltering world.

When the Berlin Wall fell, it was our shared belief in freedom that carried Europe forward. When acts of terror targeted open societies, it was intelligence, cooperation, and resolve that preserved them. And when adversaries blur fact and falsehood, our task is to defend the space where truth can still stand.

What We Choose to Do Defines Us

As we step into the future, the tools at our disposal will evolve. But what will always matter most is the human element. The person who stands in the shadows and says this is right and that is wrong.

That choice, the exercise of human agency, has shaped our world before, and it will shape it again because in the end it’s not what we can do that defines us, but what we choose to do.

Thank you.

More Info

{1} The video IN FULL: New MI6 Chief delivers first MAJOR address amid rising WW3 FEARS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2lkx1PY4VPw


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