By Guy Faulconbridge and Kylie MacLellan LONDON (Reuters) - After the deadliest attack on Europe in over a decade, Britain said on Monday it would hire more spies while France called for better intelligence sharing and tougher controls on the EU's external borders against arms smugglers and Islamist militants. Islamic State warned in a new video on Monday that countries taking part in air strikes against it in Syria would suffer the same fate as France - where at least 129 people died in Friday's bloodbath in Paris - and threatened to attack Washington. With European Union governments faced with defending over 500 million citizens of the bloc from such well-planned attacks,...
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