‘Lady Bond’ – Ms Blaise is First Woman spy Chief of MI 6
She used to be Q too
By Shyam Bhatia
London. In a plot twist worthy of Skyfall (or perhaps a rebooted Dr. No with AI surveillance and a diversity clause), Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service has appointed its first-ever female chief: Blaise Florence Metreweli. She currently serves as Director-General of Technology & Innovation — or, for Bond aficionados, the real-life equivalent of Q. Come October, she’ll become “C”, the codename for the Chief of MI6.
So to recap: the woman who once designed the gadgets… now signs off on the missions. From exploding pens to encrypted protocols, Blaise Metreweli is now licensed to lead.
“I am proud and honoured to be asked to lead my Service,” she said modestly — resisting, one imagines, the temptation to quip, “Now pay attention, 007.”
At Cambridge, she studied anthropology and rowed in the victorious 1997 women’s boat race team. Rowing, incidentally, offers excellent preparation for espionage leadership: long silences, intense bursts of effort, and absolutely no questions about the real destination.
She joined the Service in 1999 as a case officer, served in the Middle East, and earned a reputation for combining field savvy with cutting-edge digital know-how. One former colleague joked, “She could reprogram a biometric lock faster than Bond can undress a Russian asset.”
In Bond lore, Q hands you a car that drives itself and reminds you to bring it back in one piece. In real life, Metreweli was Q — heading the high-tech division that dreamed up the modern tools of British espionage. Unlike Q, she never got to grumble when agents blew them up. Now, as C, she’ll be the one approving the missions where those tools are deployed.
Rumours that she insists on an encrypted earpiece that also dispenses Earl Grey tea — shaken, not stirred — are sadly unconfirmed.
Insiders say MI6 under Metreweli may start running less on Aston Martins and more on quantum encryption. “The toys will still be there,” said one source, “but now they’ll come with a user manual — and biometric ethics.”
One tongue-in-cheek rumour circulating Vauxhall Cross is that agents may soon be issued AI-powered cufflinks and climate-neutral exploding watches — but will still be expected to find their own tuxedos.
Meanwhile, the fictional “M” is said to be feeling the heat. “She’s younger, sharper, and doesn’t rely on brandy to get through budget meetings,” one MI6 veteran whispered. “And unlike Bond, she actually reads the footnotes.”
But no spy story is complete without a darker backstory.
Metreweli’s grandfather, Constantine Dobrowolski, was unmasked last year as a Nazi collaborator in occupied Ukraine. Dubbed “The Butcher of Chernihiv,” he assisted in rounding up Jews and political dissidents before vanishing in 1943 as the Soviets advanced.
Metreweli has said nothing publicly about the revelations. Close friends say she never knew him — her father changed the family name, became a British citizen, and cut all ties to that shadowed past.
Still, in true Bond fashion, there’s something poetic in the arc: the villain’s descendant ends up heading the agency that hunts villains. Just don’t expect this C to stroke a white cat or deliver orders from a volcano. This is espionage 3.0 — data lakes, cyber threats, and the occasional drone swarm.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer called her appointment “historic.” Outgoing chief Sir Richard Moore praised her as “a highly accomplished intelligence officer and leader.”
The Foreign Office described her as “formidable, disciplined, and forward-thinking” — which sounds less like Bond and more like the person who actually manages Bond’s expense account.
A GCHQ analyst put it more bluntly:
“It’s like if Bond stole the Aston Martin and came back years later to run the factory.”
And maybe insisted the next model be electric.
So here we are. MI6’s top job — the most secretive chair in British public life — is about to be occupied by a woman who understands VPNs, cyberwarfare, machine learning, and what it means to make a perfect dry martini.
Her name is Metreweli. Blaise Metreweli.
And while her grandfather may have belonged in an entirely different kind of war film, this — unmistakably — is her story now.
Forget Bond girls. The new boss is Bond.
Only smarter. Better dressed. And — according to at least one source — more likely to make sure the martini, like the tea, is not only shaken, not stirred, but also served with a side of operational foresight and a clean digital footprint.