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Russian gets 13 years for passing missile data to CIA
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Feb 10, 2012


A Russian space engineer received a 13-year jail sentence Friday on charges of passing secret strategic missile data to the US Central Intelligence Agency in return for cash.

Russia's FSB security service said test engineer Vladimir Nesterets from the northern Plesetsk cosmodrome admitted receiving payments for information about "tests on Russia's latest strategic missile systems."

The security service refused to specify the types of systems involved in the case or the size of the payments.

But analysts called the apparent security breach a significant blow for Russia because its armed forces use the northwestern site to test and launch every type of missile in production and development today.

"This is the Russian strategic missile forces' main launch site," independent military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer said. "All current mobile systems and their warheads are launched from and tested at Plesetsk."

The military is currently developing a new generation of missiles and warheads that Moscow hopes will soon replace an ageing Soviet-era arsenal that was developed at great expense at the height of the Cold War.

The powerful weapons are meant to penetrate the various defences designed by Washington and remain instrumental to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's promise of overseeing a military resurgence if elected to a third term as president in March.

The Komsomolskaya Pravda daily said Nesterets had himself volunteered the information to the CIA and received just $1,000 because he worked with the older generation Topol-M model in service for more than 15 years.

"The CIA will take anything about the Russian military -- even if the information turns out to be rather old," Felgenhauer said.

Undated footage on Channel One state television showed Nesterets being detained by two plainclothes security officers as he was getting out of his car at a parking lot and then led away with his hands cuffed behind his back.

"He wrote to me and said that he never did anything shameful, that he did not betray his motherland," Nesterets wife Irina told the RIA Novosti news agency.

"Why was he arrested? They did not catch him red handed," she said.

Nesterets' conviction came just days after Russia's outgoing leader Dmitry Medvedev told an FSB meeting that foreign governments were stepping up their spying activities in the country.

Medvedev said the FSB had uncovered 199 foreign spies and agents last year. He added that some of those detained were Russian nationals working for Western states.

Russia often discloses the arrest or conviction of foreign agents at a time of diplomatic tensions with the West.

Moscow is currently locked in a heated war of words with Washington and Europe over the Syria crisis and is also upset at NATO plans to push ahead with the deployment of a new missile defence system in Europe.

The FSB in October disclosed holding a Chinese national on espionage charges linked to another missile system. The case was announced on the eve of a key visit to Beijing by Putin.

"These cases are not publicised when relations with the West are normal. The arrests are still made but no information goes out," Felgenhauer said.

"The fact that they disclosed this now means that we are playing diplomatic games again," added analyst Alexander Konovalov of the Centre for Strategic Assessment.

"Anti-Americanism is fashionable in Russia again," Konovalov told AFP.

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Canada, Russia agree on silence in spy case: report
Ottawa (AFP) Feb 10, 2012 - Russia has agreed to a Canadian request not to publicly disclose any information in the case of a Canadian soldier charged with leaking secrets, a local broadcaster reported Friday.

CTV said Russian ambassador Georgiy Mamedov told one of its correspondents during a cocktail reception this week that Moscow has a deal with Ottawa to stay silent until the naval officer's court case is over.

Mamedov reportedly went on to say that Russia was keeping quiet so as to preserve its "good relations" with Canada. He also denied reports that embassy staff were implicated in the affair, saying they are "dead wrong," said CTV.

Local media had previously reported that Canada expelled a total of six Russian diplomats last month, including Moscow's defense attache and a consulate worker in Toronto.

In parliament, Parliamentary Secretary for Foreign Affairs Deepak Obhrai said, "This matter relates to national security. So, I have no further comment."

The Russian ambassador was not immediately available to comment.

In Moscow, however, the Russian foreign ministry has previously denied earlier reports of its diplomats leaving Canada over the spy scandal.

Canadian naval officer Jeffrey Paul Delisle, 40, has been accused of communicating over the past five years "with a foreign entity information that the government of Canada is taking measures to safeguard," according to court documents.

The charges were laid out under the Security of Information Act. Delisle also faces a criminal charge of breach of trust.

The offenses allegedly occurred in the capital Ottawa, Halifax and in towns in Ontario and Nova Scotia provinces, the court documents said.

Convictions under the security act carry a maximum penalty of life in prison.



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