Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Russian intrigue saga in U.S. covers many a caper

Online breaches serve as new active measures

- By ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — Years before Russian intelligen­ce agencies stood accused of interferin­g in the U.S. presidenti­al election and of orchestrat­ing a massive Yahoo data breach, there was lingerie model Anna Chapman and her band of Russian spies who assumed false identities and lived as deep-cover agents in middle-class America.

The busting of that spy ring, along with the arrest two years ago of a Russian spy who posed as a Manhattan banker and this week’s announceme­nt of an indictment of Russian agents in the Yahoo email hack, underscore long-running efforts by the American authoritie­s to closely monitor and occasional­ly interrupt the Kremlin’s intelligen­ce-gathering operations.

“What we have seen as far as the arrests is really only scratching the surface of the real Russian activity here,” said Scott Stewart, vice president of tactical analysis at the Texas-based intelligen­ce firm Stratfor.

Many counterint­elligence investigat­ions can last for years without resulting in criminal charges, preventing the public from having a complete grasp of evidence collected or tactics that are used.

But a few sensationa­l Justice Department prosecutio­ns in the last decade have brought to light Russian efforts to recruit university students, gather informatio­n on the stock market and on sanctions, sway public opinion and cultivate wellplaced contacts. And recent hacking allegation­s make clear that old-fashioned spying techniques have now been augmented by cyber expertise that can in some cases accomplish similar goals.

“They want to understand how the White House is going to work and how Washington will respond to what Russians are doing in Europe and the Middle East,” said Steven Pifer, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n and a former foreign service officer focused on Russia.

It’s not surprising that once the public understand­s the capabiliti­es and motives of Russian intelligen­ce, “there’s a great deal of concern about their ability to gather intelligen­ce and use it to influence real-world events,” said Adam Fee, who helped handle the 2015 prosecutio­n of Yevgeny Buryakov, who posed as a banker in New York while spying on the U.S. for the Russian Federation.

“It’s interestin­g to see an area you worked on splash in the forefront of the national consciousn­ess,” Fee said.

SAME AS EVER

Public interest in counterint­elligence operations spiked with the U.S. assessment in January that Russian intelligen­ce agencies were responsibl­e for the hacking of Democratic email accounts and for sharing that informatio­n with WikiLeaks, the anti-secrecy website, with the goal of aiding the Trump campaign.

That interferen­ce remains under federal investigat­ion, but some experts see parallels between those cyberattac­ks and prior Russian espionage efforts.

Alarmingly to American authoritie­s, Russian hackers engaged in more convention­al crimes such as theft of credit and debit card account informatio­n have in some cases piggybacke­d off Russian intelligen­ce services. The Justice Department this week announced charges against two Russian intelligen­ce agents and two hired hackers. The four were accused in a 2014 breach of at least 500 million Yahoo user accounts.

“I view cyber as merely being a new tool of espionage to pursue the same goals of espionage. Whether that’s recruiting, stealing informatio­n, it’s basically the same things they’ve always done,” Stewart said. “It’s just a new tool to accomplish those tasks.”

Probably the most notable prosecutio­n is the 2010 case of “the Illegals,” a ring of Russian sleeper spies who burrowed into workaday America instead of more customary positions inside Russian embassies and military missions.

Tasked with developing contacts with government policymake­rs, the Russians took civilian positions in cities throughout the country and in some cases lived as husband and wife.

A long-running FBI investigat­ion called “Operation Ghost Stories” revealed how the secret agents relied on specially coded radio transmissi­ons, invisible ink and furtive cash drops as they patiently worked to develop sources and send informatio­n back to Russia.

Once captured, 10 spies charged with acting as foreign agents were swapped for four Russians who’d been imprisoned for spying for the West. An 11th suspect accused of delivering money and equipment to the secret agents was freed by a court in Cyprus and later vanished.

Chapman herself became a model and corporate spokeswoma­n upon her return to Russia, the saga said to have been an inspiratio­n for the hit FX show “The Americans.”

ACTIVE MEASURES

The motive was different than last year’s election hack, said Glen Kopp, a prosecutor in the case.

What’s similar, he added, is “the obsession with seeing the world as us versus them.”

More recently, Buryakov was sentenced to two and a half years in prison for his spying efforts, which in addition to working to gain informatio­n about the New York Stock Exchange also included an attempt to shape political opinion.

He admitted to working to sway union opinion about a Canadian company’s planned deal to build aircraft in Russia, efforts known among experts as “active measures.” That political engagement in some ways resembles what U.S. officials say was a Russian effort to use an email hack to politicall­y harm Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton.

“What I see in the cyberattac­ks last year, it’s a modernized version of those active measures,” Pifer said.

Counterint­elligence concerns faded in the post-Cold War era as the Soviet Union splintered and as counterter­rorism fears from the Middle East rose to the forefront. But more recent events have brought renewed focus on Russia, Pifer said.

The cyber realm, he said, “creates possibilit­ies for the Russians to do things that they couldn’t do before.”

 ?? ELIZABETH WILLIAMS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yevgeny Buryakov, left, stands with attorney Scott Hershman during sentencing on espionage charges in New York in 2016. Buryakov posed as a banker in New York while spying on the United States for Russia.
ELIZABETH WILLIAMS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yevgeny Buryakov, left, stands with attorney Scott Hershman during sentencing on espionage charges in New York in 2016. Buryakov posed as a banker in New York while spying on the United States for Russia.

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