A British spy was likely responsible for more lives lost than saved during the Troubles, report says

FILE - A wall painting supporting the Irish Republican Army, seen in the Catholic area of Belfast, Northern Ireland on Nov. 1985. A seven-year investigation into the activities of a former Irish Republican Army double agent concluded Friday that the spy was probably responsible for more deaths than lives saved during Northern Ireland's three-decade conflict. The probe, known as Operation Kenova, investigated the actions of “Stakeknife,†a senior IRA member who was passing information to British intelligence during “the Troubles.†(AP Photo/Peter Kemp, File)

LONDON (AP) — A seven-year investigation of a former Irish Republican Army double agent concluded Friday in an interim report that the spy was probably responsible for more deaths than lives saved during Northern Ireland 's three-decade conflict.

The probe, known as Operation Kenova, investigated the actions of “Stakeknife,†a senior member of the Irish Republican Army who was passing information to British intelligence during the conflict known as the Troubles.

The ´ºÉ«Ö±²¥ Press. All rights reserved.