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Austrian colonel spied for Russia for decades, Vienna says


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Austrian colonel spied for Russia for decades, Vienna says

By Francois Murphy

 

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Austrian Ambassador to Russia Johannes Eigner sits inside a car as he leaves the Russian Foreign Ministry headquarters after it was declared that Austria suspects a recently retired military officer in spying for Russia for decades, in Moscow, Russia November 9, 2018. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

 

VIENNA (Reuters) - A senior Austrian military officer is believed to have spied for Moscow for decades, Vienna said on Friday, adding to a list of recent Russian espionage cases and souring relations with arguably the country's closest ally in the EU.

 

Austria was in the minority of EU countries that did not expel any Russian diplomats over the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Britain, which London has blamed on Moscow. Russia denies any involvement.

 

Conservative Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, who governs in coalition with the far-right and pro-Moscow Freedom Party, has said that decision was in line with Austria's neutrality and a tradition of maintaining good relations with countries on both sides of the former Iron Curtain.

 

Vienna is a major diplomatic centre hosting many foreign officials.

 

But Kurz hardened his tone on Friday, announcing that a recently retired colonel was believed to have spied for Moscow from the 1990s until this year.

 

"If the suspicion is confirmed, such cases... do not improve relations between Russia and the European Union," he told reporters, without naming the suspect. The case has been referred to prosecutors and the former colonel has been questioned.

 

Foreign Minister Karin Kneissl, who danced with Russian President Vladimir Putin at her wedding in August, has cancelled a planned trip to Moscow over the case. She has also summoned the Russian charge d'affaires since the ambassador is outside the country.

 

"For the moment we are demanding transparent information from the Russian side," Kurz said.

 

'UNPLEASANTLY SURPRISED'

 

In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he was "unpleasantly surprised" by Vienna's allegations and Moscow knew nothing about the retired officer, news agencies RIA and Interfax reported.

 

Russia had in turn summoned the Austrian ambassador, agencies said.

 

Kurz repeatedly referred to a recent case in the Netherlands in which the government said Russian agents tried to hack into the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons while it was investigating the Skripal case.

 

Western countries last month issued coordinated denunciations of Russia for running what they described as a global hacking campaign.

 

"Based on the information we have but also because of recent events for example in the Netherlands we can very much assume at the moment that our suspicion will be confirmed," said Kurz, who has met Putin in Austria twice since the Skripal poisoning.

 

It is not yet clear whether the case is an isolated one, Defence Minister Mario Kunasek said, speaking alongside Kurz.

Austria was tipped off about the case weeks ago by an ally's intelligence service, and issues of interest to the officer or his alleged handlers included weapons systems and migration into Europe, Kunasek added.

 

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2018-11-10
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Russia just being Russia. Time for Austria to smarten up and smell the coffee in regards to Russia. Maintain diplomatic ties, but fully realize Russia is not your friend. You may have common interest from time to time but that is it. Leave a skeleton staff in Mosco, and allow Russia to do the same in Austria. 

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On 11/10/2018 at 12:55 PM, geriatrickid said:

Austria  just being Austria. 

Investigate the man and if there is evidence put him on trial. If he is guilty, hang him for treason.

 

No death penalty in Austria. And besides, might come handy for this or that spy-swap in the future.

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50 minutes ago, Morch said:

 

No death penalty in Austria. And besides, might come handy for this or that spy-swap in the future.

No much use as he is now retired.

 

But in reality many countries have recruited Russians to spy on their motherland, where we the the British and the Americans have been so successful is we have turned officers within the Russian intelligence services and been able to shutdown Russian spying operations, bet we have known all about this guy from the day the Russians recruited him.:whistling: 

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