A man named as Ryan Fogle by the Russian Federal Security Service, lies on the ground during his detention in this undated handout photograph released by the Press service of Russian Federal Security Service May 14, 2013. Russia said on Tuesday it had caught an American red-handed as he tried to recruit a Russian intelligence officer to work for the CIA, a throwback to the Cold War era that risks upsetting efforts to improve relations. The Federal Security Service said Fogle, a third secretary at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, had been detained overnight carrying "special technical equipment", a disguise, a large sum of money and instructions for recruiting his target. The U.S. Embassy declined comment.
In the days of the Soviet Union, street maps of Moscow did not exist for most citizens, or they were deliberately misleading. In fact, the very best Moscow map was created by the CIA, and it was treasured by diplomats, journalists and spies.
Today, Russia is wired, and the Internet service Yandex provides a swell digital map of the city that you can navigate on a smartphone. All of which suggests that something else is afoot in the highly publicized arrest and expulsion as a spy of a U.S. Embassy employee in Moscow last week.
The Russian Federal Security Service, known as the FSB, said that Ryan C. Fogle was caught red-handed trying to recruit one of its officers, carrying cash, a letter, a compass, a map, sunglasses and two wigs. We don’t know what Fogle was doing, but the story sounds fishy. Back in the 1970s, perhaps, a CIA case officer would need a map, although he would not carry it on an operational run. A human hair wig wasn’t unheard of, but the CIA’s disguises were far superior to that floppy blond thing Fogle was wearing.
The way
Fogle’s arrest was turned into a public spectacle suggests it was a setup by
the Russian security service. Earlier this month, Russia detained for 16 hours
an American lawyer who had been living in Moscow and then expelled him from the
country. The lawyer, former Justice Department official Thomas Firestone, had
turned down a Russian attempt to recruit him as a spy, The New York Times
reported.
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