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007 association gives MI6 recruitment headache

LONDON
Mon Nov 26, 2007 2:32am EST
Daniel Craig looks over a scene during the filming of a James Bond movie at the Palio horse race in Siena's main square August 16, 2007. The success of the James Bond movies has given the British Secret Intelligence Service a recruitment headache -- too many cranks want to join MI6. REUTERS/Marco Bucco

Daniel Craig looks over a scene during the filming of a James Bond movie at the Palio horse race in Siena's main square August 16, 2007. The success of the James Bond movies has given the British Secret Intelligence Service a recruitment headache -- too many cranks want to join MI6.

Credit: Reuters/Marco Bucco

LONDON (Reuters) - The success of the James Bond movies has given the British Secret Intelligence Service a recruitment headache -- too many cranks want to join MI6.

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"I think it gives people a false impression of what working for the organization is actually like," the head of MI6 recruitment -- named only as "Mark" -- told BBC Radio One's Newsbeat program on Monday.

"So it does tend to turn up quite a lot of thrill seekers and fantasists and we're really not interested in them".

As well as dismissing the notion that spying was a never-ending life of fast cars, fast women and shaken not stirred Martini cocktails, "Mark" was keen to demolish another myth surrounding MI6.

"We don't have a license to kill -- we don't carry Berettas -- that's simply not true."



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