On 29 June 2007, West was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the
British Home Office, with responsibility for security in the administration of Gordon Brown, and that same day Brown announced that West was to be created a
life peer. On 9 July 2007, he was created
Baron West of Spithead, of
Seaview in the County of
Isle of Wight, and took his seat in the
House of Lords. In November 2007 he told the
BBC Radio 4 Today programme that he was not "totally convinced" of the need for 42-day detention (without trial) of terrorist suspects. But less than two hours later, following a meeting with the
prime minister, he said he was "convinced" of the need for the new legislation. The incident was an embarrassment for the government, particularly as West was the
minister charged with navigating the controversial
Counter-Terrorism Act 2008 through the House of Lords. During his time with the Home Office, he produced the United Kingdom's first-ever National Security Strategy (as trailed in his Seaford House paper of 1992) and Cyber Security strategy as well as formulating a series of other new strategies: the counter-terrorist policy, cyber security, chemical, biological radiological and nuclear security, science and technology for countering international
terrorism and guidance for local government in enhancing the security of crowded places.
Post-Home Office In September 2011, he contributed to a book entitled
What Next for Labour? Ideas for a New Generation; in his piece he highlights his view that
defence spending under
Tony Blair was insufficient. In August 2014, West was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to
The Guardian opposing
Scottish independence in the run-up to September's
referendum on that issue. In 2014, he challenged
Michael Gove to a boxing match after Gove's reported comments ahead of the centenary commemorations that left-wing academics were spreading unpatriotic myths about the
First World War via programmes like
Blackadder. In the wake of the June 2015
Sousse attack, he said Britain must step up the "propaganda war" against the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). "They are running rings around us in terms of the social media they are putting out." He also suggested the West should consider working with Syrian president
Bashar al-Assad, whom he qualified as a "loathsome man", while he called for Britain to consider joining the US in conducting air strikes against ISIL targets in Syria. In January 2016, following news emerging about serious power and propulsion problems with the Royal Navy
Type 45 destroyer, West argued it was a "national disgrace" that the Navy only had 19 destroyers and frigates. In August 2016, he described the issues facing the MoD post-
Brexit as a "
perfect storm", insisting that there were great difficulties for the British military as a result of Britain's exit from the
European Union. In April 2018, he expressed doubts as to whether Assad's government perpetrated the alleged
Douma chemical attack and dismissed the
White Helmets as having "a history of doing propaganda for the opposition forces in Syria". On BBC Television News he said, "When I was Chief of Defence Intelligence I had huge pressure put on me politically to try and say that our bombing campaign in Bosnia was achieving all sorts of things which it wasn't. I was put under huge pressure. So I know the things that can happen with 'intelligence', and I would just like to be absolutely sure." In October 2020, he said migrants arriving in the UK across the
English Channel should be put in "a concentrated place, whether it's a camp or whatever", prompting outrage. West's commentaries on foreign militaries, such as his assessment on the strategic weaknesses of
Russia's armed forces, have been distributed by news agencies such as
Times Radio. In January 2025, West backed a report calling on the UK government to halt a deal that will hand sovereignty of the
Chagos Islands to
Mauritius. In December 2025, West joined the four-episode docudrama
Titanic Sinks Tonight aired on
BBC Two, giving professional input about the sinking of the
Titanic. ==Personal life==