• 5 months ago
Transcript
00:00In the wake of yesterday's aborted terror plot, opposition leaders have been swift to
00:10question the government on the impact of its anti-terror legislation.
00:14Other than a brief statement in which it gave thanks to the police and emergency services
00:17for their part in averting an unthinkable catastrophe, the government has yet to officially
00:22comment.
00:23No details have been released about the identities of the suspected terrorists involved.
00:28It is believed one of the would-be bombers died in the attack, there were no other casualties.
00:44So you're not going home?
00:45I sold my house, given that I was inconveniently dead.
00:51It's a house.
00:53I know that you and Adam...
00:54Adam and I were never going to be here, Harry.
00:58That's why I stayed dead in the first place, to let him move on.
01:01And you?
01:02Me too.
01:04To let me move on.
01:09Adam was going to die, Harry.
01:12To know him at all was to know that he knew it.
01:14It didn't frighten him, it exhilarated him, it gave him purpose.
01:17Yes.
01:21I've had a lot of time and I've done a lot of thinking, Harry.
01:23I made my choices, I made them a long time ago.
01:25As it turns out, they were the right ones.
01:29This is what I am.
01:34I want it back.
01:38Give me Section D.
01:39Ross, there's nobody more capable of running the Section, I know that.
01:42But you think because Adam died I'm going to go to pieces.
01:44Well, I'm not, I'm ready.
01:45You might be.
01:46You might be ready to leap into the fray, Ross.
01:49But I'm not even sure I can trust my own judgement at the moment.
01:52My friend is dead.
01:53And I want nothing more than revenge.
01:57I want to take the Russian operation in Britain,
02:00shoot it through the heart and watch it bleed to death.
02:05Might we allow that indulgence?
02:08I'm going to ask Dolby for authorisation to target Kachemov directly.
02:16Go to bed, Harry.
02:18We're not doing each other any good.
02:26No.
02:48Go home, Malcolm.
02:50I'm too angry to go home.
02:53So what are you doing?
02:54Displacement activity.
02:57Surfing the frequencies.
03:00Don't stay all night.
03:01Absolutely.
03:03Good night.
03:54SIREN BLARES
04:24DOOR OPENS
04:42SCREAMS
04:44SCREAMS
04:47SCREAMS
04:51SCREAMS
04:54SCREAMS
05:03SCREAMS
05:15...is that the Kremlin is sponsoring Al-Qaeda in London, yes?
05:19By sponsoring terrorism on these shores,
05:21Russia is demonstrating the price Britain is paying
05:24for her wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
05:26and thereby for her reliance upon Middle Eastern oil.
05:29Rather than, one supposes, the cuddly Russian variety.
05:32The Kremlin is attempting to destabilise this country,
05:35which is a stepping stone on Russia's path
05:37towards becoming the world's first energy superpower.
05:40Moved as I am by the clarion call,
05:42I'm bound to say that you haven't given me enough
05:45to authorise the targeting of a senior Russian figure,
05:48especially since the relationship between Britain and the Kremlin
05:52is already at a 30-year low.
05:55The Security Service doesn't base its strategic policy
05:59on one officer's desire for revenge,
06:02however eminent the officer.
06:05You do see that, Sir Harry.
06:08How's the promotion looking, Richard?
06:10Rosie, is it?
06:12We're all upset, Harry.
06:14But let's not forget ourselves.
06:16After all these years, it would be a pity
06:18if either of us said anything we might later regret.
06:22Just let's be clear, Harry.
06:23You stay away from Arkady Kachemov.
06:29Best leave it there, I think, don't you?
06:34Good to see you.
06:46The incident with the trolley is unfortunate,
06:48but everyone seems to have accepted it as accident.
06:51They have no idea when the storm has come.
07:14Hello?
07:15Hello there.
07:17Moving in?
07:18I am, moving in.
07:20It's always such a mess, isn't it?
07:22It's such a pickle.
07:24It is.
07:25Saving your life in boxes.
07:28Macaroons.
07:29To welcome you to your new home.
07:32Would you like to come in for a cup of tea?
07:34I'm sure I've got a kettle here somewhere.
07:36You've got more than enough to be getting on with.
07:39I'll take a wind check on the tea.
07:41Rain check?
07:42Quite.
07:45Thank you.
07:50I have not been authorised to target the Russian operation in London.
07:53So what do we do?
07:54We target the Russian operation in London, led by this man, Arkady Kachemov.
07:59I've been told we can't target him directly,
08:01but we have to find out what his game is.
08:03He's a real and present danger to the British people.
08:05And let's not forget,
08:06this is the man responsible for the death of Adam Carter.
08:10Adam once said to me,
08:12revenge is an expression of pain.
08:14Pain is weakness.
08:16We never show weakness.
08:18Well, Adam's dead, Joe.
08:20Exactly how well do we know Kachemov?
08:22File three inches thick.
08:23Tells us where he's been, what he's done, and with whom.
08:25But I want the smell of him.
08:27His breath.
08:28His sweat.
08:29And to that end, I'll be contacting Lucas North to brief me later today.
08:32In addition to building a file on Kachemov,
08:34we select a key Russian player in London.
08:36No one with diplomatic status.
08:37We don't want to give them any reason to play the victim.
08:39And then let's leverage that asset until the pips squeak.
08:42Find me a way to stop Arkady Kachemov.
08:45One more thing.
08:46As of today,
08:47Ross assumes the position of Section Chief.
08:52So, shall we?
09:12Yes.
09:16Yes.
09:31Hi.
09:37Yes.
09:42Yes.
09:48Good morning, Lucas.
09:49Harry.
09:50How are you?
09:51How's the team coping?
09:52Would you mind coming onto the grid?
09:53I need you to brief us about Kachemov.
09:56I'll be there in two minutes.
09:58Harry.
10:02It's okay.
10:10Sorry.
10:22Hello.
10:23Harry Pearce has called me onto the grid.
10:25He wants to talk about you.
10:28Pleased as I am to hear from you, Lucas.
10:30Your standing orders are never to make direct contact with me.
10:33This is what handlers are for.
10:35Well, I've yet to meet my handler, Arkady,
10:37and this is a one-use phone.
10:38What will you tell him?
10:40That you're a pussycat.
10:44You need to watch your back.
10:46Harry's developed a particular animus for you.
10:48He's jealous.
10:49He worries for your loyalty.
10:51He has to. He's a spy.
10:53But still, this need to worry, it wounds him.
10:56He wants to trust you. He yearns to trust you.
10:59Therefore, in his heart, he has decided to trust you,
11:02whether he is aware of that fact or not.
11:05Gotta feel sorry for the poor bastard.
11:07I promise I will try.
11:09You're not giving the chance he's going to eat you alive.
11:11No.
11:12Let us hope if he ever gets the chance, he has a hearty appetite.
11:17And there can be no more direct contact, Lucas.
11:20We don't see each other, we don't speak to each other again.
11:24This is the nature of your life now.
11:26You must live with all your friends and your enemies.
11:28Your enemies are your friends.
11:32I must ask you to do this for me.
11:36My operation will make contact very shortly.
11:39Over and out, then.
11:42Over and out.
11:54Over and out.
11:59Gotta see each other. I don't start with you.
12:16Donut, Malcolm?
12:18I had this off at once. Sorry.
12:21So, how are you? About Adam.
12:25Well, to be honest, I'm not quite sure.
12:28That's a shock. Losing someone like that.
12:31Someone that shines brightly in your life and then...
12:34winks out.
12:35Adam was...
12:37very admirable.
12:41Drove like a lunatic, though.
12:43How are things with you?
12:45Fine, I think.
12:47Are you all right for food? The service could arrange something, so you're stocked up.
12:50You're a very kind man, Malcolm. That's one thing that hasn't changed.
12:53But, uh...
12:54didn't mind the shopping.
12:56Lucas? If you would.
13:01If you want to get inside the head of Arkady, cut him off.
13:04The first thing you need to know is he's patient.
13:07He spent years interrogating me. He was always very...
13:11gentle.
13:13Very playful.
13:14No aggression, no impatience.
13:16So he's a chess player?
13:18Yeah.
13:19It was three years before he even began to cede hints about turning me...
13:22sending me home.
13:23And how does he approach that?
13:25Did he play on sexual anxiety?
13:28The fear your ex might...
13:29No.
13:30No, he never took that route.
13:33He used my relationship with you, Harry.
13:37In what way?
13:38Well, he implied that you, personally, didn't seem to be in much of a hurry to get me back.
13:42So, however obliquely, he used personal revenge as a motive?
13:46Yes.
13:53And what are your personal feelings towards him?
13:58What do you want me to say?
14:00I spent eight years getting to know the man.
14:02He was good company.
14:05He was my only company, so...
14:06Your only company?
14:08You had no other visitors?
14:10No FSB interrogators?
14:12Plenty.
14:13Especially in the first few months, but I wouldn't describe them as company.
14:20Thank you, Lucas. You're free to go.
14:22Good luck with the unpacking.
14:35Ross, could I just have a word with Harry, please?
14:37Naturally.
14:42I know what you're going to say, and I'd like to say...
14:44I want to come back.
14:45No.
14:46I'm ready.
14:47You are not.
14:48The debriefing process alone will take several weeks.
14:50Then there's the question of your physical and mental health.
14:52Of course, there's the question of my loyalty.
14:54In my mind, there's no question, but that's my mistake, Lucas.
14:57It would be wrong of me to trust you because of where you've been, who you've been with,
15:00and the threat that Russia currently poses towards this country.
15:03Don't take this personally.
15:05You're home.
15:06Take the time.
15:07Enjoy it.
15:09Home isn't where you live.
15:11It's where people understand you.
15:13If I don't have trust from MI5, from you,
15:16then I'll never really be home.
15:19I'll just be back in England.
15:25We think we might have a potential Russian asset.
15:28What?
15:30We think we might have a potential Russian asset.
15:33What have you got?
15:34Well, if we're looking at non-diplomatic targets,
15:36then the oil company Christus Oil is the go-to destination.
15:39Several of its UK-based employees are active Russian spies.
15:42But the biggest fish by far is this man.
15:45Alexander Boletsky.
15:47If anyone knows what Kachumov is up to, it's him.
15:49He's already being mentioned as a future Russian president.
15:52His line to the Kremlin couldn't be more direct or more privileged.
15:55So he'll know as much about high-level Russian espionage in Britain as Kachumov himself?
15:58He's based out of Moscow with a house, well, a mansion, really, in Surrey.
16:02Yeah, it's like Moscow on Thames.
16:04He's got a wife, two kids, both at private school,
16:06both with 24-hour security and surveillance.
16:08The place is wired like a Swiss bank and under constant watch.
16:11Dirt?
16:12Well, for a man with presidential aspirations,
16:14he's got an unhealthy fondness for fine art.
16:17Not all of it kosher.
16:20OK.
16:22Well, if he's our big fish, let's hook him, land him, gut him.
16:25Play dirty.
16:28Come on.
16:42Mrs Spaletsky?
16:43Yes.
16:44May we come in?
16:45What's happened?
16:53Be quiet.
16:54Don't move.
16:56All right, get down.
16:57Down, down, down, down.
17:00Be quiet.
17:17You're being watched, Mrs Spaletsky,
17:19so lie there nice and still until your guard arrives.
17:26Connie tells me you've been on the grid all night.
17:28That's not the way to deal with it, Mark.
17:30I was here because a GCHQ listening station
17:32picked up an anomaly on a frequency scan.
17:34Ah, I see.
17:37And am I going to understand the next bit?
17:39It was a low-power beam at 532 nanometres,
17:42a pulse of half a nanosecond.
17:44I say again?
17:45I think it may be a comms burst from a submarine.
17:47What submarine?
17:48Exactly.
17:49I've been liaising with GCHQ, Naval Command and the Cousins,
17:52trying to eliminate alternative explanations.
17:54Alternative explanations to what?
17:56To the fact that there might be
17:58an unidentified Russian submarine in British waters.
18:22And it definitely didn't originate from a British vessel?
18:24Well, there were none within 500 square kilometres of the point of origin.
18:27Are there nations with subs capable of a stealth incursion?
18:30America, but it's not America.
18:32Then it's the wrong strategic theatre for the Chinese.
18:34Last known Russian deployment?
18:36The St Petersburg,
18:37but even she couldn't enter our coastal waters entirely undetected,
18:40besides which she's currently in dock for a refit.
18:42It's as if the Russians are fluttering their eyelashes,
18:45glaying innocent.
18:46If there's a Russian stealth vessel operating in British waters,
18:48I want to know what the hell it's up to.
18:50I need hard proof of its existence and its purpose.
18:53Go and put the squeeze on, Boletsky.
19:05Good, good, good.
19:11I want you to find out who they are.
19:13And I want you to bring me bits of them.
19:16Pananda!
19:17Excuse me, sir.
19:19It is that.
19:27They want me to do what?
19:30To kill her.
19:49Don't turn around.
20:19Why not?
20:21I've got split ends.
20:23What do you want?
20:25Money?
20:31Just so you know what we're talking about.
20:34This is St Catherine Rising,
20:36painted by Peter Paul Rubens between 1609 and 1612.
20:40You had it stolen from the Georgian People's Public Museum 12 years ago.
20:43Would you like it back?
20:45Yes.
20:46What is Russia planning?
20:49I have no way of knowing this.
20:53Of course you may choose to let me keep the painting,
20:56in which case I'll reveal its provenance.
21:00Do you think there'll be a President Boletsky
21:02if you've been imprisoned for theft?
21:05Look, sir, I'll ask you again.
21:07Because I was brought up to be polite.
21:10And because I'm in a good mood.
21:13What is Russia planning?
21:17Yesterday, a coded damage report was relayed
21:22to an FSB safe house
21:26from a Russian submarine in British waters.
21:29It was damaged in a collision of some kind.
21:33What else?
21:34Nothing.
21:37Oh, but always something.
21:40Tell me and I'll let you keep it.
21:42Potashty, potashty.
21:44All I know is I've been ordered to shut down
21:46Khrustosov's computer service today.
21:48When today?
21:49Till 58pm.
21:52Why?
21:53Because I do as I'm told to do.
21:56Is that everything?
22:02Congratulations.
22:04Your testicles are yours to take home with you.
22:13Thank you.
22:19Harry, I think we got what we wanted.
22:21There is a submarine out there.
22:22There's also something happening at 4pm.
22:24Boletsky's been ordered to shut down his company servers.
22:31All right?
22:32Yeah, good. Why?
22:33You just seem very chipper.
22:35Well, I'm a very chipper person. Ask anyone.
22:37I thought...
22:39You know.
22:40People type in.
22:42Anyone you have oil meet, they die.
22:47Would you like me to get out and push?
22:49Yeah.
22:50Sorry.
22:53Last night, a fishing boat sank off the east coast.
22:55Now, if it sank as the result of a collision with a submarine,
22:58that would explain the damage report.
22:59The damage report would explain Malcolm's rogue comms signal.
23:02So the submarine's still in British waters?
23:04As of last night, yes.
23:05We also know that Boletsky was personally ordered
23:07to take the Khrustos oil servers offline at 3.58pm today.
23:10I've been thinking about this ever since we picked up the comms burst.
23:13Boletsky's intel seems to corroborate it.
23:15I think they might be planning to tap a cable.
23:17What does that mean?
23:18Electronic data travels through fibre-optic cables
23:20which crisscross the ocean floor.
23:21There are thousands of them,
23:22passing billions of phone calls, emails, electronic files,
23:25travelling through a strand of glass as thin as a human hair.
23:28They run uncovered at depths in excess of 1,000 feet.
23:30Making them accessible to a specially equipped submarine.
23:33Making it the perfect location from which to launch a cyber attack.
23:36Because from the deep ocean,
23:37nobody could prove that they were responsible.
23:40The Cyberwarfare
23:53Cyberwarfare?
23:54Estonia. Early 2007, a cyber attack almost took out the entire country.
23:58The attackers send a tsunami of information,
24:01clogs up computer servers, brings them down and sort of kills them in the end.
24:04It's called distributed denial of service.
24:06With distributed denial of service,
24:07a sophisticated attack would instantly shut down every computer system in Great Britain.
24:11The damage inflicted would be on a scale otherwise achieved
24:13only through an all-out nuclear strike.
24:15We have less than four hours to pre-empt it.
24:17We better call the JIC.
24:22Harry, what have you come here to propose?
24:24Shut down the internet.
24:25Oh, shut down the internet. Of course.
24:28You know, for a moment I thought you were about to suggest
24:31something altogether absurd.
24:33If this country does not have internet connectivity,
24:35then the attack cannot happen.
24:36So, shut it down.
24:38Can we even do that?
24:40We do have a provision in place, yes,
24:42but this notion is certifiably insane.
24:46It is a drastic contingency,
24:47but it's the only contingency left open to us.
24:50It's not a contingency.
24:52It's an error that would cost the economy billions.
24:55You have no concrete evidence whatsoever.
24:58This is entirely circumstantial,
24:59and one has to assume, Harry,
25:01that you're being motivated emotionally.
25:03I'm sorry, Harry, I have to agree.
25:05Then you're wrong.
25:06Richard, for once, put departmental politics aside
25:08and listen to what I'm actually saying.
25:10What you're saying is that we should take a medicine
25:12that's as bad as the malady.
25:13Kill or cure. Is that it?
25:15Harry, this is just too much to ask.
25:17Even if I was of a mind to help you,
25:19Number 10 would never... could never allow it.
25:22Then Number 10 is about to watch this country stumble and fall.
25:33Hello, mate. Got a package for Lucas North?
26:03All these years of knowing him, I never understood.
26:30Why the fascination for William Blake?
26:34Blake was a visionary. He distrusted systems.
26:38Lucas is the same.
26:42So, how does it make you feel to think of seeing him?
26:47A little sick.
26:48This is a normal reaction. It will pass.
26:53How will I contact him?
26:55Your contact has already been made.
27:26I don't understand.
27:30Who better to be your handler than your ex-wife?
27:33What?
27:37You were...
27:44Always.
27:47I loved you, but I love Russia too.
27:54How many years did I waste?
27:55You lied to me too.
27:56I never lied.
27:57Did you tell me what you were?
28:01I thought of you.
28:03All that time.
28:05Eight years.
28:07I thought of nothing but you.
28:11You lied to me.
28:13But now your lie is turning around and coming back at you.
28:17What we have left is this.
28:19I can't do this.
28:35The point of me being your handler is that there's every reason for people who were once together,
28:42who have not seen each other for so long occasionally to catch up,
28:48drink coffee.
28:52What do you need to know?
28:55An encrypted communication was sent last night from international waters.
29:00Has MI5 identified the source of this signal?
29:03There's no way that I can access that kind of information. The trust isn't there. Not yet.
29:09Well, you're the spy.
29:11I need you to report by 3.30pm. After that, no phones.
29:16Why no phones?
29:18All I know. No phones.
29:26Malcolm, we urgently need a plan of attack. We need to get onto the offensive.
29:29Have we got anything from the JIC?
29:31The Joint Intelligence Committee won't take the political risk.
29:34They're sending us a couple of naval technicians.
29:36We've got three hours to avert this attack.
29:38Well, the only thing I can come up with is that to launch the attack,
29:41the submarine needs to physically link to the fibre optic communications cable.
29:45If we can find a way of talking to the sub, computer to computer,
29:50I could launch a zero-day attack, effectively bouncing the cyber attack back onto its source.
29:55It would take out the sub's computer system, its navigations.
29:58Would you have time to prepare the attack?
30:00Well, yes, but we need to identify which fibre optic cable the sub is planning to log onto.
30:05Out of several thousand.
30:06And even when we find that out, I'll still need the submarine's remote access protocols.
30:10We need somebody with access to Arkady Kachumov.
30:15Yes, sir.
30:39So, how are you?
30:45I'm fine.
31:04I have the target one. Sorry.
31:08I have the target one. Sorry.
31:11I have the target one. Sorry.
31:25I have the target one. Sorry.
31:32I have the target one. Sorry.
31:40I have the target one. Sorry.
31:53To foil the cyber attack, we have to use the asset we have who is closest to the Russians.
31:57You want to use Lucas?
31:58He has a relationship with Kachumov.
31:59Kachumov was responsible for Adam's death, Harry.
32:01And I said we will have revenge. This is the start.
32:04Lucas is damaged goods. You want to put him up against a man like Kachumov?
32:07I said before...
32:08He was one of the best. Was.
32:11If this submarine attack takes place, it's not just the economy that will scream.
32:15There'll be civilian casualties.
32:17We've only got two hours and I'm running short of options, Roz.
32:22Do you trust him?
32:28Bring him in. Let's talk. He left his house ten minutes ago.
32:32You've had the place under surveillance?
32:33Of course.
32:34Do you know where he is now?
32:35No. You could try his ex-wife, Elisabeta Starkova.
32:37I'll get you onto it. I'll go round to Lucas's flat, see what he's done with the place.
33:04Harry?
33:05Roz?
33:06Lucas is a very mucky puppy, which is unlikely for someone who's just spent eight years under the regime of strict prison discipline.
33:12Everything in this room has been carefully positioned.
33:15By the way, I'm not searching it.
33:26That's her. Elisabeta.
33:29Yep.
33:30She's leaving the building. No sign of Lucas.
33:32Thanks, Jo. Stay on her.
33:36Thanks.
33:45Pest control. Anything on the video surveillance?
33:48They used to send a nice young man.
33:50Any movement of note?
33:52There was something earlier.
34:06Shit.
34:16Oh, crap.
34:20Roz?
34:21Harry, I'm afraid we've gone bobbing for a bad apple.
34:24Lucas is a double agent. You were right to be cautious.
34:28On this occasion, I'd be happy to have been wrong.
34:37So, turns out actually doing this is more difficult than I thought it was going to be.
34:42Anyone who sells themselves as a virgin once.
34:45And you didn't sell yourself cheap.
34:48Eight years.
34:52What if it'd been five years?
34:55Four years?
34:56Two?
34:59What conversation would we be having now?
35:02What conversation would we be having now?
35:05This one.
35:15Lucas, it's for the best.
35:19MI5 never helped you.
35:21These people.
35:23You owe them nothing.
35:26You gave them all those years of solitude and darkness.
35:31In comparison, this.
35:33This little bit of information.
35:36It's nothing.
35:40Thank you.
35:49Are you happy?
35:52Happiness isn't about getting what we want.
35:55It's about appreciating what we have.
35:58So, yes.
35:59I'm happy.
36:02One day you'll be happy too.
36:15You didn't really believe all that happiness crap, did you?
36:31How's the nervous system?
36:33Twitchy.
36:36This is a mistake.
36:37I'm glad you didn't waste those years trying to memorize convincing excuses.
36:41Maybe Katchemoff should add that to his curriculum.
36:43We should be following Elisabetta.
36:45We are following Elisabetta.
36:47Come on, Lucas. Impress me with your ability to talk your way out of this.
36:53I agreed to be Katchemoff's agent in London. Of course I did.
36:56But just to get back. To come home.
37:00Covenants, I couldn't rely on you to do it for me.
37:02And you failed to mention this earlier.
37:04Why?
37:05I told you in the car.
37:07You joked about it in the car.
37:09You suspected it anyway. You were as good as told me so if I'd admitted it officially you'd have locked me in a cell and debriefed me for months on end and...
37:14I've seen enough selves.
37:17So I decided to prove myself by bringing Katchemoff to you.
37:20This is actually rather good.
37:21Because it has the advantage of being true.
37:23You passed on deeply sensitive information to the head of the FSB in London in order to bring him down.
37:28Yes, I did.
37:29Explain to me how that works.
37:31Katchemoff ordered me to find out about a message that you may have intercepted.
37:35Something originating from the ocean.
37:37And you decided to find it and tell him?
37:40I did.
37:41Why?
37:42Because he knows what the message is, he knows where it came from and he knows that you've intercepted it.
37:46He's testing me.
37:47Sending me out to get something that he already knows.
37:51It's the only way he can prove my worth as an asset and Katchemoff really, really needs to trust me.
37:56It's his greatest vulnerability.
37:59He's embarked on a major operation and in the chaos that follows, he's going to need a man on the inside.
38:06Because that way he can stay one step ahead of any possible retaliation.
38:11He wants you, he wants all of us, dancing to his tune.
38:16If you're lying to me, you won't get so much as a funeral.
38:21I sent Elizaveta to meet Katchemoff because I had to get him out of that embassy.
38:25I have to get him out and on his own if I'm going to turn him.
38:29I know you want to marry.
38:31So do I.
38:33This is your chance, your one chance. Take it. Now.
38:36Right now.
38:39Or let him go.
38:45We need you to get the submarines remote access protocols.
38:48They'll be inside the Russian embassy.
38:50How much time do we have?
38:51Less than an hour.
38:55Okay.
39:00Okay. It looks like she's making a run, Nathan.
39:02I tell you this, Elizaveta.
39:04You go now and pick up your child.
39:07Buy a bottle of water and canned food, enough to last for one week at least.
39:11Two perhaps, three to be safe.
39:14What's happening?
39:15There will be unrest for a while.
39:19So, you go now.
39:21Get your child. Be safe.
39:26You went that way.
39:29I'll catch you later.
39:31So what is this?
39:33Surprise party. Music and dancing.
39:36Oh, I think there have been enough surprises for one day.
39:38Anyway, I've got something for you.
39:42Please, go on.
39:44This is a submarine.
39:45A spy submarine in British waters.
39:47Today it will be used to launch a cyber attack on Britain.
39:51This is what MI5 is like?
39:53This is what MI5 is like.
39:54This is what MI5 has learned.
39:57How do they know these things?
39:59They have a mole.
40:01The Russian embassy.
40:03Very high level.
40:04Who?
40:07You.
40:10Don't be so stupid.
40:11It's you, Arkady.
40:13Like it or not, it's you.
40:16Look at the pair of you, so old school as if the wall never fell.
40:22So your whole strategy is rather dependent on one thing.
40:27Which one of you am I loyal to?
40:29It should be an easy decision.
40:31Without control over energy, your country is finished.
40:35Yeah, but if I were to make a decision based on something more than self-interest,
40:39I could expose you as a traitor.
40:41This is not true.
40:43No.
40:44Can I make it look?
40:45Yes, I can.
40:46No, you can't.
40:47Not true.
40:48Well, we know about the submarine attack, and we know because you told me,
40:51and I told MI5.
40:53They will never believe you.
40:54Depends what they want to believe, because
40:56your bosses are certainly going to want to scapegoat when we decide to publicize this aggression.
41:00If I were you,
41:02I'd keep a Geiger counter handy, because they're going to light you up like Litvinenko for making them look stupid.
41:06If, however,
41:08you give me the subcodes, and we foil this little plot with nobody,
41:11only the wiser would not be better for everyone.
41:15What delicious irony.
41:18You are trying to turn me into my own spy.
41:22Well, let's just call it a strategic retreat on your part.
41:27Live to fight another day.
41:28It doesn't really matter if I'm not your spy, Arkady.
41:30What matters is whether you get lost in the fallout.
41:59What's going on?
42:05It's working.
42:22They've got eight minutes till the attack is due.
42:28Let's go.
42:58As soon as I access this data, set alarm bells all over the embassy, and they will come.
43:01Just do as you're asked. Leave the worrying to me.
43:28What's going on?
43:34This is the Russian Federation.
43:35This is an emergency call from MI5.
43:37Agent ID PLM29-8818181.
43:41Code word RINO. Repeat, code word RINO.
43:44Please be advised, MI5 has a credible threat.
43:46There is a bomb in the building. Repeat, there is a bomb in the embassy.
43:55Do it now.
43:58Do it now.
44:23Come on, Lucas.
44:28Come on.
44:50Up there.
44:58Up there.
45:09Malcolm, it's on its way.
45:10Okay.
45:18Okay.
45:20It's a modified T-class spy sub.
45:23The Alexei Leonov.
45:25Connect to the cable. Three, two, one.
45:27They've breached the cable. We've got 30 seconds.
45:30It's launching from cable number ARD392.
45:33Deep North Atlantic.
45:35I'm launching the zero-day attack.
45:41That's their tertiary firewall infected.
45:44Nearly, nearly, nearly.
45:46The probes are in the initial position.
45:52That's the secondary firewall.
45:54Wait.
45:59Malcolm, quickly.
46:12Go.
46:14And this evening, the Kremlin has thanked the Royal Navy
46:17for its speedy assistance after a Russian submarine
46:20on an oceanographic survey sank off the coast of Britain,
46:23following what's been described as catastrophic engine failure.
46:26Naval rescue boats raced to the scene
46:28after the submarine sent out a distress signal earlier this afternoon.
46:33Excellent news.
46:35We're going to have to wait and see what happens.
46:37We're going to have to wait and see what happens.
46:40We're going to have to wait and see what happens.
46:43We've sent them a huge message.
46:46As long as it buys me out of a six-month debrief.
46:48It's bought you a return to this section.
46:51If that's what you want.
46:53Of course I do, Harry.
46:57What happens to Kachemov?
46:58He belongs to us now.
47:00That's our revenge.
47:03It seems to me the punishment doesn't fit the crime.
47:05Kachemov's a big prize.
47:06Don't underestimate his importance in future battles.
47:08Exactly what Alan would have said.
47:11Because you said to me, Roz, Adam's dead.
47:14And Kachemov is responsible.
47:17Harry, he was worth more.
47:36I'm not sure I like what you've done with the house.
47:41The tastes have changed.
47:44I'm sure they have.
47:49We love your boss, Elizabeth.
47:54Your boss too?
47:58No.
48:00You weren't the FSB when we were married.
48:02Why did Kachemov turn you?
48:05He approached me a little over a year ago.
48:07He told me you'd been arrested, that you were alive.
48:12And that you could come home if I helped him.
48:16Why did you say yes?
48:18Why put yourself at risk?
48:20He showed me photographs of you in that place.
48:25Your skin.
48:27He said it would be easier on you
48:29if you believed I had always worked for him.
48:32Well, he's a very clever man, Elizabeth.
48:35But he's not a good man.
48:37So now?
48:40You arrest me?
48:43I can tell you now I know nothing of value.
48:45My friends want to throw me out.
48:47I'm not going to let them.
48:49I'm not going to let them.
48:51I'm not going to let them.
48:53I'm not going to let them.
48:54I can tell you now I know nothing of value.
48:55My friends want to throw you to the lions.
48:58It would be so easy to implicate you.
49:01To make it look like you and Kachemov were working together for MI5.
49:05Because that's what I am.
49:07I'm MI5.
49:10I was MI5 when we married,
49:11MI5 all those years in prison,
49:12and I'm MI5 now.
49:16Whatever your reasons for working with Kachemov,
49:18you need to think about protecting your family.
49:21So let me help you.
49:23How?
49:25Work for us.
49:29Were you always this cold?
49:32Under the skin?
49:35Was that man I knew just a lie?
49:39If you don't let me do this,
49:41they will take everything away from you,
49:42this life, this happiness,
49:43it will all be gone.
49:47I know what that's like.
49:48And there are no words to describe how terrible it is.
50:00My husband is home.
50:19You a range finder, no?
50:21The British asset in Moscow.
50:24I ordered your execution.
50:26Well, silly old you.
50:29It's all over, Arkady.
50:31Done and dusted.
50:32Your escort will be here in a moment or two.
50:34I know you won't mind if I don't wait around to wave goodbye.
50:38So.
50:40This is it.
50:41This is it.
50:42You won't be free.
50:43Not for some time,
50:44but we'll make you as comfortable as possible.
50:46Until you have squeezed from me
50:47the very last piece of intelligence that I have.
50:50You know the game.
50:51And I bow to the better player.
50:54I congratulate you on your victory.
50:57God save me from any more victories like this one.
51:00There's a pity about your man.
51:03Carter, was it?
51:04He's dead.
51:05That's not a pity, it's a crime.
51:07I did what I had to do for my country.
51:09I'm not seeking forgiveness.
51:12You'll find none.
51:13And you will never find rest, Harry,
51:14until you have forgiven yourself.
51:17Men like us,
51:19there is no room for remorse.
51:22Carter was a very courageous fellow,
51:24but he was a resource,
51:25and resources can be replaced.
51:28There's always another courageous fellow
51:31waiting to step into the breach.
51:44Come on.
51:54No!