-  Article 1

EURASIA INSIGHT

TBILISI CLAIMS RUSSIAN TROOP MOVEMENTS IN RESPONSE TO SPY DISPUTE
DianaPetriashvili 9/29/06

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The espionage dispute between Georgia and Russia intensified September 29, with a statement from the Georgian Interior Ministry that Russian military "movements" had begun in territory bordering Georgia, and accusations from Moscow that the arrest of four Russian officers is part of a scheme to advance Georgia’s ambitions to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Preliminary hearings for the four Russian officers in Georgian custody have been held, while an evacuation of the families of Russian diplomats from Tbilisi has begun.

The Georgian Interior Ministry claimed that the government had detected signs of movement among Russian forces near the Georgian border, and preparations for "large-scale navy maneuvers in the Black Sea."

"Russia’s 58th Army, which is deployed in North Ossetia, is being mobilized and there is information that [the Army] is moving in [the] direction of Georgia," Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili told a news conference late September 28, according to a bulletin posted on the online news site Civil Georgia. "In addition, certain movements are being noticed on the Russian military base in Akhalkalaki [in southern Georgia]. I cannot understand why Russia needs [these] moves."

Moscow did not initially respond to the claim.

A Tbilisi city court September 29 ordered two Russian officers arrested in the Georgian capital, Dmitri Kazantsyev and Alexander Savva, and seven Georgian citizens to be held in pre-trial detention. The Russian consul in Georgia, Valeri Vasiliyev, told Rustavi-2 television that a lawyer for the officers had not been allowed into the courtroom. The Georgian Interior Ministry did not immediately comment on the allegation.

The court also passed the same ruling for Konstantin Pichugin, who has been accused of espionage, but who is believed to be inside Russia’s regional military headquarters, which remained surrounded by police for a second day. Moscow has refused to surrender Pichugin.

The two other officers in custody, Alexander Zavgorodny and Alexander Baranov, were arrested in the Black Sea port town of Batumi, and will have a separate hearing.

Russian Ambassador Vyacheslav Kovalenko, who has been recalled to Moscow for consultations, told local media that he would not return to Georgia until the four officers are released. "Georgia should release the Russian officers immediately and should apologize for their arrest," Kovalenko told reporters at Tbilisi airport.

A Russian plane left Tbilisi at 4:35pm carrying 51 Russian citizens, including 25 children. A second evacuation is planned for September 30, Andrei Popov, commander of Russian forces in the Caucasus, told the Russian news agency RIA Novosti.

Television footage of the departure showed mostly women and children, dogged by photographers and television cameras, preparing to board an Ilyushin plane, while personnel loaded luggage and what appeared to be cases of Borjomi spring water, a key Georgian export that has been banned by Russia for alleged impurities. In response to questions from Georgian reporters, most departing Russians asserted that they plan to return.

Commenting on the evacuation, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili termed the event "an excessive move" and "a propagandistic gesture."

"Everyone knows that the Russians will never face any threat in Georgia," Saakashvili told reporters. "The Georgian people are very hospitable, and this is widely known. In Georgia, they are probably more secure than in their own state."

Meanwhile, attempts at dialogue continued to falter. A previously scheduled meeting between Georgian Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Giorgi Manjgaladze and Russian Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Grigory Karasin was canceled.

Russia on September 28 asked the United Nations Security Council to condemn Georgia for taking "dangerous and unacceptable" steps that could destabilize the region, but the initiative was not carried. Members have requested greater information about the situation.

While the international community considers its response, Moscow has criticized Georgia’s NATO ambitions for contributing to the crisis. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov implied that the arrest of the officers was part of Georgia’s plan to secure membership in the Western defense alliance, adding that Saakashvili had chosen the "military way" to resolve conflicts with the breakaway Georgian regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. "First, they want to get out the Russian peacekeepers by any means possible . . . then use force to resolve the conflicts . . . and then, submit their application to NATO," he told a news briefing in Slovenia broadcast by Russian State Television.

At a meeting between the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the Russian Council in Slovenia, Ivanov charged that unnamed NATO members have been supplying Georgia with military equipment. "Some members of NATO - shall we call them the younger generation? - are supplying Georgia with arms and ammunition of Soviet production," news agencies quoted Ivanov as saying in an apparent reference to Eastern European countries who joined the alliance in 2004.

Western members of NATO are reacting with caution. NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer called for "moderation and de-escalation" by both Georgia and Russia. De Hoop Scheffer went on to stress that "this is not an issue in where NATO will play any direct role."

US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told reporters that he had discussed the topic with Ivanov, and stated that the situation is "a subject of great interest" to Washington, the American Forces Press Service reported.

Reactions among Georgians to the spy spat differed.

"I am glad these spies were arrested. I hope that Georgia will not step aside from the chosen strategy in the future," Nuka Basharuli, a refugee from Abkhazia who now lives in Moscow. "But the recent developments are likely to have a negative impact on me and my family," he added referring to a possible worsening of attitudes among Russians towards the thousands of Georgians living and working in Russia.

The daily Georgian newspaper Rezonansi (Resonance) played on this worry with a front-page story September 29 that warned readers that massive deportations and arrests of Georgians in Russia will begin soon.

Others saw a political angle. "This spy arrest suits both countries in their struggle for votes," Giorgi Lezhava, a 26-year-old Tbilisi resident, said, "Russia pretends that it has no spies, while Georgia pretends that there is something extraordinary about Russian spies in Georgia. It’s all about politics."

Some Georgian opposition members have evaluated the recent developments as part of the government’s campaign strategy for nationwide local elections scheduled for October 5, while others maintain that Georgians should stand together in the face of Russian "aggression."

"The arrest of the Russian officers is definitely connected to the election campaign," David Berdzenishvili, a leader of the Republican Party, commented to EurasiaNet. "The authorities want to show that they are strong and able to destroy any enemy of Georgia."

David Zourabichvili, a parliamentarian from the Democratic Front uniting the Conservative and Republican Parties, took a different tact. The Russian officers’ activities constitute "an [act of] aggression and [a] threat towards the entire state and the Georgian people," Zourabichvili told a September 29 news briefing, Civil Georgia reported. "Against this background, we call on everyone [to unite] in order to avoid giving Russia a reason for speculation about alleged . . . fighting inside Georgia."

Editor’s Note: Diana Petriashvili is a freelance reporter based in Tbilisi.

Posted September 29, 2006 © Eurasianet
http://www.eurasianet.org

-  Article 2

Russia jails double agent for selling secrets to Britain
(China Daily)
Updated: 2006-08-11 06:38
A Moscow court sentenced a double agent to 13 years behind bars yesterday, after he sold details of Russia's spy network to Britain for a decade.
In a case that echoed Cold War spy scandals, a military court found 55-year-old Sergei Skripal guilty of high treason and spying and stripped him of his rank of colonel, Russia's Chief Military Prosecutor Sergei Fridinsky told reporters.
Skripal was "turned" by Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, known as MI6, in the mid-1990s and until his arrest in 2004 he helped blow the cover of dozens of Russian spies working abroad, an intelligence source said.
"Through his actions, the spy inflicted significant damage on the defence capability and security of the state," said a spokesman for Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB), the KGB's main successor agency.
Prosecutors said Skripal was paid as much as US$200,000 which was deposited in a Spanish bank account. Officials said he pleaded guilty at his trial held behind closed doors.
The FSB's counter-intelligence department arrested Skripal after a probe. Details of the case have not previously been made public.
Russian television showed footage of a shocked Skripal being arrested by five men and then shoved into a van with his arms held behind his back. He will serve his sentence in a high security prison.
It also showed grainy images of Skripal, carrying a luxury Louis Vuitton bag, going through security checks at an airport. Rossiya television station said he was flying to meet his handlers in Britain.
It was unclear which Russian intelligence service employed him. The FSB said he was a colonel in the Russian military. The military has its own intelligence arm called the GRU.
"He was turned by British special services in the mid-1990s and until 2004, when he was detained, he gave them top secret information for money," Yevgeny Komissarov, a spokesman for the military court, told reporters.
The FSB said Skripal continued to sell information to MI6 even after he left his post in the special services in 1999.
Spy scandals, recurring thorns in British-Russian relations during the Cold War, are less frequent now although both sides accuse each other of running spying operations.
In January, Russian television broadcast footage which it said showed British spies transmitting information via a receiver concealed inside a rock on a Moscow street. It said the spies were working as diplomats at the British Embassy.
The FSB backed up the television report but none of the diplomats was ordered to leave the country.
Under Russia's criminal code, treason can be punished with a sentence of 12 to 20 years. Skripal has 10 days to appeal against the conviction.
A spokesman for the British Embassy in Moscow declined to comment. "It is our policy never to comment on intelligence matters," the spokesman said.
(China Daily 08/11/2006 page7)
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-  Article 3

Aid groups shelter spies, Russia says

Foreign organizations fear new harassment

Reuters

Published: December 19, 2006

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MOSCOW: The state security chief stepped up pressure on international nongovernmental organizations and charities Tuesday, saying they were increasingly being used as cover for foreign spying operations.

President Vladimir Putin has already accused foreign powers of using the groups for political ends, and this year signed a law on nongovernmental organizations that activists say could be used to harass charities.

Nikolai Patrushev, head of the FSB state security service, said 27 foreign spies and 89 agents working for foreign secret services had been caught in 2006.

The Itar-Tass news agency quoted Patrushev as saying there had been a sharp increase in foreign espionage from "legal positions" in society.

He said the spies were sheltering behind "many international funds and organizations that deal with questions of widening cooperation and humanitarian help, as well as media organizations."

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His Cold War-style rhetoric reflected the new mood in Moscow. Foreign spy scares are back in vogue following the poisoning of a former Russian agent in London and a spy scandal in January, when Russia accused British diplomats of using a fake rock placed by a roadside to transmit secret messages.

Patrushev singled out the Danish Refugee Council, a private humanitarian organization that works with people displaced by fighting or economic ruin in Chechnya.

"Employees of this nongovernment organization, contrary to official announcements of their aims, are systematically trying to collect biased information about the political, economic and military situation in the North Caucasus," Patrushev said.

Arne Vaagen, head of the Danish Refugee Council's international department, rejected the accusation.

"I am very surprised because we have never been subject to such allegations before and I hope that he has been quoted correctly," he said by telephone from Denmark. "We are in the area due to humanitarian needs and we have been there for 6 years with the support of the Russian authorities."

3 positive tests for radiation

Tests on three more London hotel workers have shown that they were exposed to low levels of polonium 210, the radioactive isotope that killed the former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko, health officials told Reuters Tuesday in London.

The tests bring to 10 the number of people in Britain found to have been contaminated by polonium 210 since Litvinenko died on Nov. 23. He accused the Kremlin of assassinating him. Moscow has strongly denied the charge.

The Health Protection Agency said that the 10 people exposed, 9 hotel workers and Litvinenko's wife, faced no immediate danger and that any long-term health risk was likely to be very small

-  Article 4

#2
No spy tunnel under Russian embassy in US - source
MOSCOW, March 8 (Reuters) - A Russian counter-intelligence source dismissed
reports of a U.S. eavesdropping tunnel under the Russian embassy, saying on
Thursday they were Washington's invention and aimed at discrediting spy
suspect Robert Hanssen.
The New York Times reported the existence of the tunnel last weekend, quoting
unnamed officials as saying they believed the operation had been betrayed to
the Russians by FBI agent Hanssen, who is charged with selling secrets to
Moscow.
RIA news agency quoted a high-ranking source in Russian counter-intelligence
as saying the Cold War-era tunnel never existed, and the report was
intentionally circulated by U.S. secret services to "burden Hanssen with a
serious guilt."
It quoted the unnamed source as saying, "Americans had little" concrete
evidence against Hanssen, especially him "being an agent...and dug (the
tunnel) under him."
The source said rather than digging a special tunnel under the Soviet and
then Russian embassy, U.S. secret services used underground telephone cable
lines, sewage pipes and the central pillars of the building to spy on the
personnel.
RIA said the monitoring system had been discovered and terminated by Moscow
some 10 years ago.
Russia has asked Washington for formal clarification of the tunnel reports
and said, if proved true, they would amount to a "blatant violation of
recognised norms of international law."
A U.S. federal judge on Monday ordered Hanssen, a veteran FBI agent who was
arrested on February 18 and faces life in prison or death if convicted, to
stay in jail on the grounds that the government's evidence was "exceptionally
strong."
Hanssen allegedly sold secrets to Russia and the Soviet Union since 1985,
including names of double agents and U.S. electronic surveillance methods.
His lawyers have said he is planning to plead not guilty.
Moscow has so far declined any official comment on the affair.
Hanssen's case is one of several espionage cases inflaming relations with
Washington in recent months.
U.S. businessman Edmond Pope was sentenced last year to 20 years in prison on
charges of seeking information on a underwater torpedo. President Vladimir
Putin pardoned him in December.
Russian researcher Igor Sutyagin, who works for the prestigious USA and
Canada institute, is on trial in a town near Moscow on charges of passing
secrets to Western handlers. He denies the charges.