Kuwait Times

Spy case shows Russia up to old tricks

- NEW YORK: Economic warfare Orders from Moscow

Three men accused in the latest Russian spy case in the United States didn’t hide behind fake identities and weren’t stealing military secrets. They even appeared annoyed that their assignment wasn’t more like a James Bond film. Their alleged plot to dig up “economic intelligen­ce” on possible banking penalties and alternativ­e energy sources may not be the stuff of Hollywood movies, but US authoritie­s insist the case is proof that Russian spying is thriving in America more than two decades after the end of the Cold War.

It also shows the resources the US still throws at those suspected of being spies for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government: listening bugs, hidden cameras and intercepte­d phone calls. “Russian spies continue to seek to operate in our midst,” US Attorney Preet Bharara warned after the arrests last week. Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Luk-ashevich countered by accusing US authoritie­s of manufactur­ing a spy scandal as part of its “anti-Russian campaign.”

Annemarie McAvoy, a Fordham Law professor and former federal prosecutor, said the latest case shouldn’t be taken lightly. “We have to be concerned about the economic warfare end of this. That’s what worries me,” she said, noting the crippling cyber attack on Sony Pictures. She said the arrests might show that the spy game has changed as countries seek informatio­n to possibly attack businesses and the economy.

The case against Evgeny Buryakov, Igor Sporyshev and Victor Podobnyy comes less than five years after the arrest of 10 covert agents - a sleeper cell referred to as “The Illegals” by the SVR, the foreign intelligen­ce agency headquarte­red in Moscow - who led ordinary lives in the United States using aliases. All 10 pleaded guilty in federal court in Manhattan to conspiracy charges and were ordered out of the country as part of a spy swap for four people convicted of betraying Moscow to the West.

Federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn brought another spy case in 2013, accusing Alexander Fishenko, a naturalize­d US citizen from Kazakhstan who made millions off his Texas export firm, of being a secret agent for the Russian military. Fishenko, who pleaded not guilty, is scheduled to go to trial later this year. Not everyone views the latest case as a scary new wrinkle in spy tactics.

“What is interestin­g about this case, just like the 2010 sleeper spy case, is how little these accused Russian spies are accomplish­ing. Either the FBI is just getting the low-hanging fruit, or the Russian foreign intelligen­ce agency isn’t doing its job very well,” said Kimberly Marten, a political scientist at Barnard College, Columbia University. Prosecutor­s say the latest investigat­ion exposed espionage by Sporyshev and Podobnyy, who held low-level diplomatic positions, and Buryakov, a Bronx resident with a visa and a position in the Manhattan branch of a Russian bank.

US prosecutor­s say under orders from Moscow, Sporyshev’s main duty was to give Buryakov assignment­s to gather intelligen­ce on potential US sanctions against Russian banks and efforts in the US to develop alternativ­e energy resources. They say Sporyshev and Podobnyy would analyze the informatio­n and report back to the SVR at a Russian Federation office in New York they thought was secure but apparently was bugged.

In one secretly recorded conversati­on, Podobnyy complained to Sporyshev that their work was nothing like “movies about James Bond,” according to the papers. “Of course, I wouldn’t fly helicopter­s, but pretend to be someone else at a minimum,” he said. Sporyshev griped that he too thought he “at least would go abroad with a different passport.”

The court papers also detailed demands on Buryakov from SVR to come up with questions for a Russian news organizati­on - believed to be Tass - to ask about the inner workings of the US stock market. Normally, prosecutor­s said, the two men would speak on the phone in code to set up meetings outdoors, with “Buryakov passing a bag, magazine or slip of paper to Sporyshev,” court papers said.

Some meetings took place near Buryakov’s red-brick home on a quiet block in the Bronx. Neighbors said 39-year-old Buryakov, his wife and two children largely kept to themselves. They recalled a man sitting in a car on the block for hours at a time - in hindsight, they say, it was probably surveillan­ce - but were surprised when the FBI raided the home last Monday. A judge ordered Buryakov held without bail. Podobnyy and Sporyshev, whose diplomatic status gave them immunity, have returned to Russia. A Russian spokesman told the Tass news agency that Buryakov “vehemently denies the alleged offenses.” — AP NEW YORK: Yevgeny Buryakov appears in federal court in Manhattan after his arrest earlier in the day in connection with a Cold War-style Russian spy ring that spoke in code, passed messages concealed in bags and magazines. — AP

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