The Russian plane that landed in Moscow last week as part of the biggest prisoner exchange with the U.S. since the Cold War carried "spies, assassins and criminals," said The Guardian. It also carried two "wide-eyed and confused" children.
Sofia, 11, and Daniel, 8, were raised in a seemingly Argentinian family, completely unaware their parents were actually Russian and part of an "elaborate network of deep-cover sleeper spies." Their parents — real names Anna Dultseva and Artem Dultsev — are one of the most high-profile cases of Russian "illegals" since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
What are 'illegals'? Most spies are "legals," working as diplomats in their respective countries' foreign embassies while secretly gathering intelligence. "Illegals" are undercover agents who live under false identities, sometimes for decades, like the Dultsevs.
Sleeper agents were often planted with "no clear mission" — a "hidden reserve force" that could be activated in a crisis, said Marjan Miklavcic, the former head of Slovenia's military intelligence, to The New York Times. That makes them Russia's "most prized assets," said The Guardian.
How are they trained? Illegals spend about six years training intensively to perfect their cover stories, including mastering the languages and mannerisms of their new nationalities. It's an "expensive and detailed process," said Business Insider, but one detail is "almost impossible to eliminate": accents.
The Dultsevs reportedly spoke flawless Spanish. But Vladimir Guryev, arrested for espionage in 2010 while posing as American student Richard Murphy, "looked like Boris Yeltsin and had a heavy Russian accent," his teacher said to The New York Times.
What now? Recent years have been "awful" for Russian "legals," said The Economist, with about 600 diplomats expelled from embassies across Europe since the invasion of Ukraine. Experts believe that Russia is "gearing up" its deep-cover program as an alternative, said Business Insider. It's increasingly sourcing its fake identities from South America, where corruption is "rife" and the Kremlin can "count on the support of decades-old allies."
Vladimir Putin, a former KGB foreign intelligence officer, has "thrown huge resources at this quite eccentric priority," said Calder Walton, the director of research for the Intelligence Project at Harvard's Kennedy School. He has a "real fetish" for illegals, Walton said to The New York Times. |