It just says he's walking.
David Cameron is rejecting the advice of top security officials by insisting on walking around Whitehall, refusing police motorcycle escorts and demanding to be allowed to keep his BlackBerry smartphone.
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Security analysis would suggest that if Mr Cameron is more vulnerable to attack, then the ministers and police officers walking with him, and the members of the public around him, are also at greater risk. Deeper concerns have been expressed that his actions undermine the Government’s message on national security. The MI5 threat assessment is now at “severe”, meaning that an attack is highly likely.
One former police protection commander told The Times: “He can’t have it both ways. He’s walking around like he’s at a garden party yet the public endures tight security at airports, and the Houses of Parliament are ringed with bollards, barricades and armed police.” Another source added: “With iconic figures, like royalty or the PM, there are also the threats you cannot assess — the fixated and the obsessed.”
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Friends say that Mr Cameron already feels constrained by the constant presence of police officers and wants to be able to step outside the security net. An aide said: “Whenever he can the Prime Minister will want to try to be outside the bubble. It’s only a short walk to Parliament. Clearly, if the advice is that he absolutely can’t, he won’t but he will be reluctant to give that up.”