(yet again, thanks to F. for pointing out this article to me! VS)
As international special interest groups are vying for influence in the US government, the line between espionage and lobbying work is becoming dangerously vague.
The US Justice Department announced on Monday that 10 individuals were arrested on charges of working as “agents of a foreign government [i.e. Russia] without notifying the US attorney general,” a crime that carries a penalty of a maximum of five years in prison. Nine of the arrested individuals were also charged with money laundering.
Made to resemble some sort of powerful storm front blowing in from the east, US media reported that the arrested individuals worked in “deep cover” in Boston, Montclair, New York and Arlington. An 11th suspect has been detained by Interpol in Cyprus and released on bail.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) says that it has been collecting extensive electronic surveillance of the suspects “for years,” yet, as CNN reported, the arrested individuals “were not directly involved in obtaining US secrets themselves.”
The obvious question is: what exactly did these individuals do to attract the attention of the US intelligence community?
One of the suspects is Vicky Pelaez, who has been a columnist for the Spanish-language “El Dario” newspaper for more than 20 years. Pelaez has covered a wide range of touchy topics, ranging from local and international politics to immigration issues.
Since one of the primary functions of a political reporter is to make connections and ask penetrating questions, was Pelaez singled out for suspicion by simply trying to do her job? After all, “infiltrating policy-making circles” is exactly what people in the journalistic and lobbying community do in order to fulfill the requirements of their respective jobs.
It is also the work of reporters and lobbyists to “learn about US weapons, diplomatic strategy and politics.” But simply asking questions about such subjects does not automatically make a person a spy. At least it should not.
Another one of the arrested individuals, Anna Chapman, was said to have “met with an individual purporting to be a Russian Government official in Manhattan, New York, at which she received a fraudulent passport,” according to the official criminal report.
Chapman, however, immediately went to the local police and gave them the passport.
CNN reported that Chapman never “fulfilled the mission” of delivering the fraudulent passport that the undercover FBI agent gave to her.
“She met an undercover FBI agent posing as a Russian who set up an urgent meeting asking her to deliver a passport,” reported Deborah Feyerick, a commentator with CNN. “This was her first person-to-person mission, but it [the passport delivery] never happened.”
Chapman was also arrested for apparently using her laptop computer inside of a New York City coffee shop at the same time that a Russian Government official was driving by in a minivan.
Moscow has already called the charges “contradictory,” and is demanding more information on the criminal proceedings from their US counterparts.
Then there is the case of Donald Heathfield and his quotation-marked wife Tracey Foley, and their two teenage sons.
Heathfield is the CEO of international consulting and management development firm Global Partners Inc., which Jeff Stein of The Washington Post described as “a beehive of cutting-edge technology firms with close ties to MIT and the Pentagon.” He also operates Future Maps, “a software system that helps map a picture of anticipated future events,” Wicked Local Cambridge reported.
Heathfield’s Linked-in page shows his affiliation with over 30 professional alumni, business, academic and international relations associations.
Are some US-based groups getting too uncomfortable with Russians moving into such positions of influence?
Bad timing for a scandal
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Tuesday provided a tongue-in-cheek comment over the curious timing of the arrests, while expressing his hope that the US side will explain their actions.
“They have not explained anything to us. I hope they will do so,” Lavrov, who is meeting with officials in Jerusalem, told a news conference. “The moment when all this was done was chosen quite smartly.”
Smartly, indeed. After all, just last week Russian President Dmitry Medvedev was in California, where he paid a visit to the hi-tech capital of Silicon Valley. There, he met with the leaders of various IT companies, while breaking ground on a number of ambitious virtual projects between Russian and US companies.
Russia, with its rich pool of computer engineers, is in the process of building its very own Silicon Valley in an effort to keep its IT talent gainfully employed at home, while perhaps tempting Russians abroad with the new opportunities in the Motherland. Whether the United States perceives Russia’s ambitious program of modernization as an opportunity or a challenge remains an open question.
During the Washington leg of his US visit, Medvedev and US President Barack Obama gave reporters a memorable photo opportunity inside a Washington diner as the two men enjoyed a light-hearted, all-American meal of hamburgers and French fries.
Indeed, given the good-humored atmosphere between the two presidents, it looked as if the US-Russian “reset” was not just an empty slogan to hide deep divisions between Moscow and Washington. It was the real thing. Although this unfortunate setback on the reset may blow over like a brisk summer rain, it could snowball into something that neither country wants nor needs – especially as officials in both countries are getting ready to ratify the START arms reduction treaty.
Why the hysteria over “secret agents”?
In this particular case, the arrested individuals have been charged with “conspiring to act as unlawful agents,” as opposed to full-blown, Clancy-esque spying. According to US legal code, there is nothing illegal about “an agent of a foreign government” working in the United States, so long as the individual notifies the US Attorney Generals Office of their activities.
“This is kind of a gray area, because we do have the Foreign Agents Registration Act in the United States,” Wayne Madsen, an investigative journalist and former NSA analyst, told RT. “We have many lobbyists in Washington, DC, who act as ‘agents for foreign governments.’ Now, if that’s what these individuals were doing [lobbying] it’s going to be very hard to pin espionage.”
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), for example, the largest and most powerful foreign lobby group now working in the US, employs hundreds of “agents of a foreign government” to represent the interests of Israel before the US Congress, yet few people would call them spies.
According to Section 951, Title 18 of the US Code, “Whoever, other than a diplomatic or consular officer or attache, acts in the United States as an agent of a foreign government without prior notification to the Attorney General…shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.”
The amendment, however, also relieves the US attorney general’s office of all responsibility connected with its [hypothetical] failure to provide a copy of the registration to the US Secretary of State.
“The Attorney General shall, upon receipt, promptly transmit one copy of each notification statement filed under this section to the Secretary of State for such comment and use as the Secretary of State may determine to be appropriate from the point of view of the foreign relations of the United States.
“Failure of the Attorney General to do so shall not be a bar to prosecution under this section.”
In other words, the Attorney General could fail to notify the US Secretary of State as to the activities of a specific individual or group, yet bear no legal responsibility for the oversight. At this point, it would be the responsibility of the individuals to prove their innocence.
US Attorney General Eric Holder claims he never received such a notification regarding the arrested individuals. So now the question must be asked: did somebody fumble the ball – knowingly or unknowingly – as the Bush administration handed off executive responsibility to the Obama White House?
Now, Obama’s political opponents – and there are many – may be conspiring to sabotage the American president’s efforts to reset relations with Russia, which is integral to Moscow and Washington signing the START treaty. How much these new revelations will harm those efforts remains to be seen.
Gennady Gudkov, vice chairman of the Duma Security Committee, argues that this new spy scandal is possibly a provocation by the “anti-Obama” coalition, or co-ordinated activities on behalf of the American authorities. Based on those criteria, Russia should consider its response carefully, Gudkov said in his interview with “Ekho Moskvy” radio station.
Gudkov also stressed that this whole story needs to be thoroughly analyzed before any decision is made. Since US officials have only released bits and pieces of these 11 different stories, this seems to be excellent advice.
Finally, there are reports of a decrypted message from Moscow to two of the suspects, apparently reminding them that they were sent to the United States for “long-term service.”
“Your education, bank accounts, car, house, etc. – all these serve one goal: fulfill your main mission, i.e., to search and develop ties in policymaking circles in the US and send intels back to center,” the alleged document reads.
Such a message is strange to say the least. To suggest that these individuals, who allegedly received extensive training, needed a reminder from their handlers of their mission sounds more like poorly scripted fiction than true espionage. Even a civilian arm-chair observer can understand the inherent risk of dispatching a letter – even coded – that basically outlines the entire mission, not to mention outing the agents.
Why now?
The big question on everybody’s minds in Moscow is: why now? Why did the FBI, after allegedly conducting “multi-year” surveillance of these individuals, wait until the Russian president was just exiting the United States to drop this stink bomb? Indeed, the timing of this scandalous news seems too “perfect” to be merely coincidental.
For that answer, we must go to the very tip of the iceberg of US political circles, to the very individuals behind the scenes and calling the shots in America. Who are these individuals? For starters, there is America’s extremely powerful lobbying community, which has one real objective: to sway US foreign policy, which has become dramatically militant over the last decade.
Russians may not fully appreciate this unique part of the US political process, which relies much more on special-interest spending than on any “general will” of the people.
It is these deep-pocketed groups who fill the campaign war chests of American politicians, and it goes without saying that they do not donate their money without expecting some sort of favors in return. And with big global issues on the front burner – not least of all the question of what to do with Iran, which some argue is trying to acquire nuclear weapons – many people could be accused of “infiltrating US foreign policy circles.”
So there is the possibility – however difficult to prove – that one of these powerful lobby groups called in one of their political debts – at Russia’s expense.
Indeed, those “special interests” who now enjoy the ultimate legal power of influencing US politicians in order to support specific legislation, not to mention foreign policy directives, will not stand by idly as Russians attempt to make their voice heard in Washington. It is possible that other foreign lobbies will go to great extremes to reinforce the image of Russians as “spies” in a smear campaign that will make it politically unattractive for US politicians to “do business” with America’s growing Russian community.
But in the end, what this “spy case” proves is not that the Cold War winds have returned, but that the American people must work to regain control of their political system, which has become too financially dependent upon the legal or illegal “agents of foreign governments.”
The only political lobby that should be permitted to influence the halls of Washington should be “We the American People.” All others need not apply.
——-
Commentary: I discovered one more hilarious thing about the FBI’s fairytale: one of the super-dooper secret agents not only had Facebook page with photos of her in Russia, she even had a page on the Russian social networking website Odnoklassniki.ru. Here are some photos of this super-dooper deep cover Russian spy:
Hi Saker
I guess that you still stand for your former article vis-a-vis Eran response (since you have signaled it to your readers), do you feel then that the situation is similar to what was then?
On the other hand, what possible reactions could trigger the “Spy-ring” american bitch-slapping of Russia, exactly days after Medvedev allow the amurkans the long wanted pretext of yet more sanctions?
Finally, what is your opinion about the hardly understandable Foreign policy of Russia as of late? It seems like a good issue for an extended analysis
Thanks
@anonymous: you still stand for your former article vis-a-vis Eran response (since you have signaled it to your readers)
Sorry, but I am not sure of what you are referring to. Could you be specific please?
On the other hand, what possible reactions could trigger the “Spy-ring” american bitch-slapping of Russia, exactly days after Medvedev allow the amurkans the long wanted pretext of yet more sanctions?
The fact that BOTH Russia and China did agree to support sactions against Iran leads me to believe that there is something behind this which we do not know. I can easily imagine that the Russians would commit a major strategic blunder, or act in a very narrow understanding of their short term interests, but the Russians AND the Chinese? That is harder to imagine. I think that there is more to this story than meets the eye. I am trying to figure out what the hell is was all about. So far, no good leads. But I will keep looking.
what is your opinion about the hardly understandable Foreign policy of Russia as of late? It seems like a good issue for an extended analysis
Yes, it is. However, as I mentioned above, I am in the process of trying to make sense of something which I don’t understand. As soon as I come up with something, I will definitely post it here. So far, the best clue is the fact that Iran seemed to have agreed to an US-sponsored pipeline which the Russians vehemently oppose. But it is too early to claim a causality here.
Sorry for not being able to really reply to your question.
Cheers!
The Saker
I asked for your 2007 article about Iranian asymmetrical response options. Do you still feel it is accurate in the current scenario?
In short, de you still believe that the antiimperialist forces have a better position than the Empire as of now?
there is an interesting analysis here, have a look
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/flynt-and-hillary-mann-leverett/medvedev-meets-obama-russ_b_623820.html
@anonymous: de you still believe that the antiimperialist forces have a better position than the Empire as of now?
Yes. There are changes in the vulnerability of US forces in Iraq (they are more concentrated, hence less vulnerable) and the total amount of firepower available to the US in the region is reportedly higher than what it was in 2007. However, it appears highly unlikely that Turkey will grant Israel the right to use its airspace for an attack. But that is minor, since most of the real power of the attack will be coming from the USAF and USN which has plenty of ressources all around Iran. I believe that the beginning phase of the operation will be unanimously described as yet another “huge success” for the Zionist forces (US+Israel), and that Iran will be massively bombed just like Lebanon was. However, even if Iran decides to “ride out the attack” and do nothing, which I doubt, it will soon become pretty clear that this bombing will have achieved nothing besides creating a massive political crisis and chaos all over the region. And once it is bombed, Iran will have no incentive whatsoever to negotiate about anything. And then it will become open hunting seasons on the Zionist forces all over the Middle-East.
Needless to say, Israel will use this opportunity to accelerate its slow-motion genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. They do that every time the cameras are pointed away from them. It is also likely that Hezbollah will be attacked by the Israelis and, possibly, the USA (possibly semi-covertly, but not necessarily).
But yes, fundamentally, I don’t see the situation today as qualitatively different form what it was in 2007.
We shall see pretty soon.
King regards,
The Saker
Matt Rodina also did a good commentary on the issue.
http://mat-rodina.blogspot.com/2010/06/obama-is-bum-quick-bring-out-bad.html
Maybe the spy issue is because Russian intelligence has discovered that the crime bosses organising Afghan heroin into Russia which finances Chechen terrorism and Islamist groups in Central Asia operate within the US.
“Russia has asked the United States for information about a number of people suspected of organizing the trafficking of Afghan drugs to Russia, a Russian official said on Thursday.
“We have identified several people who live in the U.S. and organize the trafficking of drugs from Afghanistan to Russia. We have passed this information on to the appropriate U.S. entities and we are waiting for confirmation,” Russia’s drug chief, Viktor Ivanov, told an international anti-drug forum in Moscow.”
http://en.rian.ru/russia/20100610/159377545.html
Dennis Hopsicker of Mad Cow Morning News has wrote about the connection between the 9/11 hijackers, CIA, Heroin trade and the “Russian” mafia.
How come you don’t have a link to RETWA (Russian Eurasian Terrorist Watch Analysis) on your blog?
http://www.retwa.com
@Jack:How come you don’t have a link to RETWA
Because I heard about it for the first time from you. Thanks for the pointer, btw! I signed up for their newsletter and if I like what I see I will add a link to them. One thing that I very much regret is that they don’t have an RSS feed on their website. If you know them, you might want to suggest that they add one.
Many thanks,
The Saker
Hi,
its’ funny to see US NSA/CIA agents doing this stunningly poor job, especially I like the mentioning “years of work” – years they spent US tax-payers money on looking after these so-called 007 agents. At least, guys who watched the gorgeous 28 year old had some fun.
@Kozeol: she is pretty, ain’t she? My favorite photo of her is this one:
http://static.businessinsider.com/image/4c2a19db7f8b9a6643cc0000-590-/image.jpg
But, serioulsly, the more I read about all this the more evident it becomes to me that this is nonsense. I mean, just read this commentary:
http://www.razvedinfo.ru/node/1094
The guy is absolutely right. These guys have ABSOLUTELY NOT the right profile or “legend” to be illegals. I have no idea what basis there is to all this, if any at all, but I know for sure one thing: these are NOT officers of the SVR and I think the Americans know that very well. Think about it, they had no need to arrest these guys at all. If, as the FBI claims, these “illegals” were in the process of slowly growing into their role as spies (hence the ‘conspiracy’) then they could have kept them nice and warm and fed them all the disinformation they wanted. A counter-intel officers dream come true: 11 “illegals” all fully identified, and all just at the beginning of their careers. And if the FBI really really really wanted to arrest them, then how hard is it to entrap somebody who put a great deal of efforts into entering the country precisely for with the hope of having some willing person pass info to him/her?
No, all this is absolute, total, 100% genuine BULLSHIT.
I have no idea what these guys were, if anything, but spies they were not. It is a disgrace that so-called “specialists” lack the decency or courage to denouce this ridiculous fairy tale!
Saker,
This 28 year old woman was apparently spotted in Turkey too and since they believed the US news (and it’s been all over the media) she is now a big news in Turkey too. I too thought “have some brains damn it” when I heard facebook page of this spy who happened to visit Turkey and also asked for the key to the wireless network in the hotel. I couldn’t decide which one was more stupid to believe: A spy who cannot afford to pay for wireless network at a hotel or a spy actually having to use a hotel’s wireless network. You decide :)
Zerkes
And here is what the world-wide war lobby does:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/10432265.stm
Zerkes
Hi all
I think that alot are conspiring againts this experience as in a need to find out what the American and Russian government are secretly hiding. The fact that they did a prisoner exchange just confirms that both countrys have been spying on each other. I suspect the russian spies gave alot of information back to hq (but what exactly?) or was this a set up from another government (or years of planing) to confuse an fuel fear into peoples minds to make them believe power nations are in a dispute? to cause a war? Neither Russia or America will want to make the first move an will manipulate a middle eastern leader to. No doubt there are still russian spies in America, vice-versa. I suspect China is involved aswell. The story continues here.
http://www.abbaswatchman.com
Be safe all
Hi all
I think that alot are conspiring againts this experience as in a need to find out what the American and Russian government are secretly hiding. The fact that they did a prisoner exchange just confirms that both countrys have been spying on each other. I suspect the russian spies gave alot of information back to hq (but what exactly?) or was this a set up from another government (or years of planing) to confuse an fuel fear into peoples minds to make them believe power nations are in a dispute? to cause a war? Neither Russia or America will want to make the first move an will manipulate a middle eastern leader to. No doubt there are still russian spies in America, vice-versa. I suspect China is involved aswell. The story continues here.
http://www.abbaswatchman.com
Be safe all