Posted on 01/23/2006 3:32:24 PM PST by familyop
Russia's main intelligence agency says it has caught four British diplomats in a spy scheme worthy of James Bond for its use of bizarre gadgetry.
According to Russian television reports, a piece of equipment that can store and exchange classified information was hidden in a fake rock in Moscow Square, allowing alleged spies to upload and download information in broad daylight while appearing to do nothing more innocuous than use a cellphone or Blackberry.
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Russia's Foreign Security Service, which called the spy rock "absolutely new spy technology," has also accused British diplomats of channelling funds to non-governmental organizations, NGOs, including one of the country's best-known human rights watchdogs.
On Sunday, Russian state television broadcast video that showed four British Embassy staff allegedly walking up to a rock to retrieve intelligence that had been uploaded by Russian agents.
"This is the first time we literally caught them red-handed in the process of contacting their agents here and received evidence that they finance a number of non-governmental organizations," security service spokesman Sergei Ignatchenko told the ITAR-Tass news agency.
Britain's Foreign Office has denied any improper conduct with Russian NGOs or fake rocks.
Russia's spy agency, which is a successor to the Soviet-era KGB, has had tempestuous relations with other foreign intelligence services, specifically accusing the U.S. and Britain of using NGOs to spy on Russia in an attempt to foment political upheaval in ex-Soviet republics.
The current spy crisis will be resolved "at a political level," possibly by expelling the British agents, said Ignatchenko.
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NGO members say Russia's allegations are just an attempt to justify a crackdown on their groups.
"This is an attempt to smear a well-known group with allegations of involvement in espionage activity," said Lyudmila Alexeyeva, a spokeswoman for Moscow Helsinki Group, a persistent critic of President Vladimir Putin.
"They are preparing public opinion for a government move to close us down, which they can now do under the new law."
I've got to show this to my tin foil hat neighbor, just think of all the hours of entertainment I'll get watching him check every rock on his property.
"There is no way that 007 can destroy this device....It's encased in a ROCK, by jove!!"
007: "A rock that can spy on the Russians? Brilliant!
It's Elizabethan English, and is current on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, as well as other enclaves of dialect surviving the schools of today.
Looks like we are heading for the stone age after all.
I wonder what the shelf life of one of those rock gizmos is?
It sort of sounds "Low Tech" is that the best they can do?
I hope they don't see the string and tuna cans.
You gotta see this cool cache.
Russia's Foreign Security Service, which called the spy rock "absolutely new spy technology,"
New spy technology, hahahahahaha! Ingenious, but terribly old hat. You and I stumble upon these quite often. ;-)
Should have used pet rocks trained to roll away if uncovered.
LOL! Everyone should have an acquaintance like your neighbor. They keep us going.
I swear that I thought it was a real rock!
Go ahead. She'll be 64 in a week.
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0000938/
I don't know about the imposter in reply #7, but this is my kind of Russian/Italian. Might even be the hottest B[l]ond[e] girl ever.
#32 is for you, cowboy.
Our friends should do better than this. Whatever happened to microdots and meeting places?
"I never joke about my work, 007..."
Not only is that a fake rock, but the bottom picture location is also fake. I've been to Red Square, aka Moscow Square, and it doesn't have woods. It is exactly what the title says it is; a very large area that's paved with red brick. There are a handful of large trees on the side of St. Basil's, not little Charlie Brown Christmas trees as in the picture, and no one dares walk on the yard.
She works wonders for me.
Darn near my age. ;o)
Just about right for an OldEagle.
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