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During 2016 elections Russian diplomats would go missing, then turn up in odd places

Tovarisc

Member
Russia escalates spy games after years of U.S. neglect
In the throes of the 2016 campaign, the FBI found itself with an escalating problem: Russian diplomats, whose travel was supposed to be tracked by the State Department, were going missing.

The diplomats, widely assumed to be intelligence operatives, would eventually turn up in odd places, often in middle-of-nowhere USA. One was found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.

According to another U.S. intelligence official, “They find these guys driving around in circles in Kansas. It’s a pretty aggressive effort.”

It’s a trend that has led intelligence officials to conclude that the Kremlin is waging a quiet effort to map the United States’ telecommunications infrastructure, perhaps preparing for an opportunity to disrupt it.

“Half the time, they’re never confronted,” the official, who declined to be identified discussing intelligence matters, said of the incidents. “We assume they’re mapping our infrastructure.”

As the country — and Washington in particular — borders on near-obsession over whether affiliates of Donald Trump’s campaign colluded with the Kremlin to swing the 2016 presidential election, U.S. intelligence officials say Moscow’s espionage ground game is growing stronger and more brazen than ever.

It’s a problem that’s sparking increasing concern from the intelligence community, including the FBI. After neglecting the Russian threat for a decade, the U.S. was caught flat-footed by Moscow’s election operation. Now, officials are scrambling to figure out how to contain a sophisticated intelligence network that’s festered and strengthened at home after years’ worth of inattention.
“They’ve just got so many bodies,” the first intelligence official said of the Russians. “It’s not about what we know [is happening]. It’s about what we don’t know.”

It’s one of the most poorly kept secrets in the intelligence community: The Russian effort is a startlingly open and aggressive one, and often falls in a complex legal gray zone.

For example, the second official said, diplomats wandering around the desert might be in violation of certain travel requirements, but it’s not necessarily illegal.

Most U.S. intelligence officials can relay stories of run-ins with Russian intelligence operatives — often moonlighting as lobbyists, diplomats and businessmen — hanging around popular Washington happy hours. It’s an open assumption that they use Capitol Hill and its public office buildings as a farming ground for potential recruits. And the presumed agents aren’t hard to spot, according to officials: An oft-traded joke is to go to one of Washington’s handful of Russian restaurants and look for the guy in a tracksuit.
Lawmakers, frustrated by Russian diplomats’ repeated violation of travel rules, inserted a provision in last year’s intelligence authorization bill that would have required Russian diplomats to provide ample notice to the State Department if they planned to travel more than 50 miles from where they were based, and further, would have required the FBI to validate that travel. According to several sources involved in the discussions at that time, the administration fought desperately — and failed — to get those provisions taken out of the bill.

Around that same time, two key Democratic lawmakers informed the White House of plans to publicly finger Russia as the foreign power behind a widespread effort to manipulate the ongoing U.S. election — something no official U.S. government entity had yet done. Fearful of escalation, the administration tried to get Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Rep. Adam Schiff, then the two leading Democrats on the Senate and House intelligence committees, respectively, to back off. The California lawmakers didn’t, and they released the statement. Backed into a corner by Congress, the administration released a statement saying the same a week later.

The Obama administration’s tentativeness in the weeks leading up to Nov. 8 — especially in the high-stakes context of a presidential election — is something that still bewilders corners of the intelligence world. Some speculate that Secretary of State John Kerry, desperate for a peace deal in Syria, urged the White House to lie low. Some blame it on fear of igniting a cyberwar, and still others say it stemmed from a generalized underestimation of the Russian threat.
Underscoring all this is that the Kremlin shows none of the same reluctance at home, nor does it show any propensity to abide by the gentlemen's espionage rules that the U.S. tends to uphold, sometimes to the chagrin of its own spy corps.

“We can’t even leave the compound over there without being followed,” the first U.S. intelligence official said.

One well-publicized incident continues to agitate officials in Washington. In June of last year, a U.S. diplomat was returning to the embassy in Moscow when a guard with the FSB, the domestic Russian security service, exploded from his booth on the compound’s perimeter and assaulted him. A surveillance video shows the guard tackling the man and throwing him to the ground before the U.S. diplomat was able to drag himself inside the doors of the embassy to safety.

The U.S. diplomat, whom POLITICO confirmed was actually a CIA officer, had done the impossible — he had lost his tails as he maneuvered in Moscow. Infuriated, the Russians sent an FSB guard the man wouldn't recognize to wait outside the embassy for his inevitable return. The officer was beaten so badly he was immediately flown out of the country for urgent medical attention.

The account was confirmed by another person familiar with the incident.
Source: http://www.politico.com/story/2017/06/01/russia-spies-espionage-trump-239003
 

Anion

Member
We are in need of a great leader right now and all we have is an expired orange cheeto

This actually is quite worrisome. In an ironic twist - McCarthy was ahead of his time
 
Jeeze this sounds like the cold open to an episode of breaking bad or a crazy spy thriller. Mapping our telecommunications lines? Nothing about that sounds innocent.
 

Trojita

Rapid Response Threadmaker
The reality of The Red Scare is happening, just decades later.

according to officials: An oft-traded joke is to go to one of Washington’s handful of Russian restaurants and look for the guy in a tracksuit.

Everyone in the restaurant?
 

Lo-Volt

Member
One was found on a beach, nowhere near where he was supposed to be. In one particularly bizarre case, relayed by a U.S. intelligence official, another turned up wandering around in the middle of the desert. Interestingly, both seemed to be lingering where underground fiber-optic cables tend to run.

WHAT?
 
I just started The Americans and espionage is more real to me now. Why are foreign diplomats, spies, embassies allowed on our soil and vice-versa?
 
Definitely worrisome. We need to just send all Russian diplomats home as well as brings our back. Nothing to be gained anymore from us having ties like that. Trump won't do that, but hopefully the next President will. I hope the FBI and CIA has learned their lesson at least and are keeping much, much closer eyes on the Russians here now.

We are in need of a great leader right now and all we have is an expired orange cheeto

This actually is quite worrisome. In an ironic twist - McCarthy was ahead of his time

McCarthy wasn't. Don't do that. His crusade was never really about the Reds.
 

Cagey

Banned
Governor Romney - The biggest threat to the US is Russia.
President Obama - The 1980s called, Governor, and they want their foreign policy back.
Supporters - OHHHH SHIT, TAKE HIM TO THE BURN WARD.

Sigh.
 
Governor Romney - The biggest threat to the US is Russia.
President Obama - The 1980s called, Governor, and they want their foreign policy back.
Supporters - OHHHH SHIT, TAKE HIM TO THE BURN WARD.

Sigh.

Well, to be fair, at the time it really seemed that way, let's not sit here and pretend like pretty much everyone didn't see Russia as a dying husk of a country less than a decade ago. I don't think it's as much as Romney was right, as much as the rest of the world never realized how far Putin would push.
 
Time to fuck these guys up and sent them home. They do the same over there in Russia. Don't know why the US agencies want to play nice. The Russians are basically stalking and threatening your guys on a daily basis, don't just take it without doing anything back.
 

Anion

Member
McCarthy wasn't. Don't do that. His crusade was never really about the Reds.
You are right, it does sound like I am praising him. I meant in the sense on how he started the Amit-communist craze.

I should clarify that I am not in support of McCarthy himself or his demagogic actions. I just wish more people would realize the gravity of covert Russian actions
 
Time to fuck these guys up and sent them home. They do the same over there in Russia. Don't know why the US agencies want to play nice. The Russians are basically stalking and threatening your guys on a daily basis, don't just take it without doing anything back.

Yep, time to send some Russians home with some missing teeth and cracked bones
 
If I could send a single piece of paper back in time I'd send a list of Soviet spies in the Manhattan Project and a strong recommendation to launch Operation Unthinkable to early 1945.
 
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