MI6, known officially as the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), feels the traditional method would be more effective in broadening its ethnic minority recruitments.
Alex Younger, the new MI6 chief, told the 'Guardian' in his first newspaper interview today that he himself was recruited that way and believes it is the most effective way of getting the right candidates rather than those who fancy themselves as trigger-happy James Bond - the fictional MI6 agent made famous in Ian Fleming's books and by Hollywood on the big screen.
"There is a perception out there that we want Daniel Craig [Bond actor], or Daniel Craig on steroids. He would not get into MI6. We need to get that message across because it is so embedded, and we have to get around that. We are between a rock and a hard place - between trying to be innovative, while protecting the secret stuff that keeps this country safe.
MI6 will begin a campaign as part of an expansion through which it will grow by up to a third.
It aims to recruit hundreds of more agents, bringing its overall staff to about 3,500. Another 900 recruits will go to linked security services - MI5 and GCHQ.
Younger's remarks came following the general perception that the agency had become the preserve of posh Oxford and Cambridge graduate spies.
"Simply, we have to attract the best of modern Britain. Every community from every part of Britain should feel they have what it takes, no matter what their background or status. We have to stop people selecting themselves out.
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