Gulf Times

Austrian colonel spied for Russia since the 1990s

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Austria has a launched a probe into a colonel suspected of spying for Russia for several decades, Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said yesterday, the latest in a string of cases where Moscow has been accused of espionage in EU states.

Kurz told a press conference that the 70-year-old army official, now retired, is suspected to have begun working with Russian intelligen­ce in the 1990s and carried on until 2018.

The public prosecutor’s office in Salzburg province confirmed that the colonel was being investigat­ed for the crime of revealing state secrets.

Foreign Minister Karin Kneissl has summoned the Russian charge d’affaires over the matter and cancelled an upcoming trip to Russia.

Russia’s foreign ministry meanwhile said it was calling in the Austrian ambassador to discuss the issue.

“Of course if such cases are confirmed, whether it be in the Netherland­s or in Austria, it can’t improve the relationsh­ip between the EU and Russia,” Kurz told reporters in Vienna.

He was referring to the expulsion of four Russian agents by the Netherland­s in April for allegedly planning a cyber-attack on the world’s chemical weapons watchdog in The Hague.

“Russian spying in Europe is unacceptab­le and to be condemned,” the chancellor added.

He said that Austria was “demanding transparen­t informatio­n from the Russian side” and that it would consult its European partners on further steps.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he had been “unpleasant­ly surprised” by the news from Vienna.

“Recently our Western partners have made it a rule not to use traditiona­l diplomacy, but instead so-called ‘megaphone diplomacy’ by publicly accusing us and for explanatio­ns about matters we know nothing about,” he told a press conference.

“We will call (the Austrian ambassador’s) attention to the methods that must be used if you have questions to put to Russia,” Lavrov added.

Austrian Defence Minister Mario Kunasek said the case came to light “a few weeks ago” as a result of informatio­n from another European intelligen­ce agency.

“We can’t say for the moment whether this is an isolated incident or not,” Kunasek said.

He said that the colonel had handed over “technical equipment” including his laptop which was now being examined.

Kunasek said that under questionin­g, the colonel said the Russians had been interested “in weapons systems, in the migration situation here in Austria in recent years”.

“Profiles of certain people were also created and passed on,” Kunasek said.

The case indicated that “even after the end of the Cold War, spying has continued and shows us the need to tighten our security network, within Austria and within the defence ministry”, Kunasek said.

According to press reports, the colonel was paid €300,000 ($340,000) for his services.

Austria is not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato) and sets great store by its status as a neutral country.

As such it was one of the few European countries not to expel Russian diplomats following the poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Britain in March.

Austria’s relationsh­ip with Russia has come under particular scrutiny since the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) entered government in coalition last December.

The FPOe – which nominated Kneissl and of which Kunasek is also a member – has had a “co-operation pact” with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s United Russia party since 2016.

In August, Kneissl caused controvers­y by inviting Putin as a guest of honour to her wedding.

In addition, the FPOe Interior Minister Herbert Kickl admitted in September that Austria had been asked to take “trustbuild­ing measures” to retain co-operation with allied secret services.

It followed reports that Western secret services were increasing­ly wary of sharing informatio­n with Austria over concerns that it could be passed to Moscow.

Earlier this week the Austrian Falter weekly published what it said was a document from the Finnish domestic intelligen­ce agency in which it asked for informatio­n from partner countries but specifical­ly excluded Vienna’s BVT agency.

 ??  ?? Kurz (left) and Kunasek at the press conference in Vienna where they spoke on the case of a retired colonel in the Austrian army suspected of having spied for Russia for decades.
Kurz (left) and Kunasek at the press conference in Vienna where they spoke on the case of a retired colonel in the Austrian army suspected of having spied for Russia for decades.

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