Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close
The Washington Times Online Edition

More Russia sleepers walk U.S. streets

10 held part of a network

The neighborhood of Marquette Road in Montclair, N.J., is where Richard and Cynthia Murphy were arrested by the FBI on Sunday. Eight others alleged to be spying for Russia were arrested at other locations. (Associated Press)The neighborhood of Marquette Road in Montclair, N.J., is where Richard and Cynthia Murphy were arrested by the FBI on Sunday. Eight others alleged to be spying for Russia were arrested at other locations. (Associated Press)

They posed as ordinary citizens, living daily, nondescript lives in communities from Arlington, Va., to Yonkers, N.Y. They were married couples with car payments, monthly rents, and telephone and medical bills. They bought computers, gave gifts and ate occasionally in restaurants.

But there was more.

The FBI says 10 people arrested up and down the East Coast on Sunday were part of a deep-cover, or sleeper network, of Russian intelligence agents operating inside the United States, where they sought to infiltrate “policy-making circles” in Washington, recruit government and business sources, and “search and develop” intelligence ties in the United States.

Worst of all, they may not be alone.

Andrew C. Kuchins, director and senior fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, told The Washington Times that sleeper networks of other Russian agents continue to operate in other areas of the United States, adding that the deep-cover activities of Russian intelligence operatives in this country have increased under Russian leader Vladimir Putin “and the other former KGB types now running Russia.”

Mr. Kuchins, an internationally recognized expert on Russian foreign and domestic policies and a director of the Russian and Eurasian Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said he is “not surprised” by the arrests, adding that U.S. intelligence officials have known for some time that Russian intelligence agents are “as active today as any time during the Cold War.”

“While there does seem to be a Keystone Kops nature to all this — and I am skeptical that people like this could get the real access they were looking for — part of their portfolio would have been to seek out those who could be useful,” he said.

One of two criminal complaints filed in the investigation said the FBI discovered a network of Russian agents operating in the U.S. with the primary, long-term goal of becoming sufficiently “Americanized” so they could “gather information about the United States for Russia, and can successfully recruit sources who are in, or are able to infiltrate, United States policy-making circles.”

The arrests took place after a fake “drop” in a park in Arlington County during which the FBI seized $5,000 that had been left by one of the suspected Russian agents in an envelope inside a folded newspaper. An 11th person was arrested Tuesday at the Larnaca airport in Cyprus while trying to board a commercial airliner to Budapest.

All 11 were charged in two separate criminal complaints with conspiring to act as unlawful agents of the Russian Federation within the United States. Federal law prohibits persons from acting as agents of foreign governments within the U.S. without prior notification to the U.S. attorney general. Nine of the defendants are also charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering.

The complaints, filed in U.S. District Court in New York, do not outline a case of espionage against those charged, but leave open the possibility that additional charges might be brought. Both allege that the suspected Russian agents conspired with “others known and unknown … to commit an offense against the United States.”

The complaints also noted that they had been submitted for the “limited purpose of establishing probable cause” and did not include “every fact” the FBI had learned during the course of the investigation.

A Justice Department spokesman noted that the FBI moved in to make the arrests when it was learned that one of the suspected Russian agents was planning to leave the country.

According to the criminal complaints, the Russian agents employed a mix of old and new covert technologies. They were trained to use short-wave radios and Morse code, they sent messages to each other and their bosses in Moscow in invisible ink, they used codes and ciphers, and they exchanged information during “brush-passes” — a technique often seen in movies, in which cash or documents are smoothly exchanged by people appearing to pass each other while walking in opposite directions.

But they also employed encrypted countersurveillance measures, they communicated through online video conferencing, they were fluent in foreign languages, and they had nearly fool-proof false identities that described them as citizens or legal residents of the U.S.

Story Continues →

View Entire Story

© Copyright 2012 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • Delegate Robert G. Marshall holds a book as he reads to the House during debate on a bill defining life at the moment of conception during the House session at the Capitol in Richmond, Va., Monday, Feb. 13, 2012.  (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

    Virginia House vote states life starts at conception

    By David Sherfinski - The Washington Times

  • A bomb specialist examines debris Tuesday in Bangkok where two explosions rocked a neighborhood. An Iranian man injured by a grenade he was carrying also was linked to a blast that ripped part of a roof off a house. (Associated Press)

    U.S. concerned about spike in Iran-Israel ‘shadow war’

    By Guy Taylor - The Washington Times

  • Mabus

    Naming of Navy ships returns to tradition

    By Rowan Scarborough - The Washington Times

  • In Case You Missed It
    Happening Now

          Independent voices from the TWT Communities

          Haydon's Soccer and Sports Pitch

          Covering the world of soccer, including the World Cup, Major League Soccer, D.C. United and the English Premier League and other interesting sporting events.

          A President for the People

          T.J. O'Hara has joined the political ring, declaring his candidacy for President. If you agree America is in need of solutions rather than political tactics, his is a message worth reading.