Friday, February 10, 2012

CIA spy sentenced for stealing Russian rocket secrets
http://bit.ly/wDXmKs
A former chief test engineer of Russia’s Plesetsk Cosmodrome, who was uncovered as a CIA agent, has been sentenced to 13-year prison term. He admitted selling top secret data on Russian intercontinental ballistic missiles to the US. Ex-Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Nesterets was found guilty of treason by a closed army court, the Russian Federal Security Service told the media Friday. He was sentenced to a high security prison term. He was also stripped off his army rank. In 2011 the FSB uncovered 41 career agents of international intelligence services operating in Russia. It also established the identities of 158 people who had been doing business with the spies, according to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who was speaking at a meeting with FSB officials. “The FSB’s counterintelligence work over the last year confirmed that international special services maintain high exercise. They are doing their jobs,” the president commented. Plesetsk Cosmodrome, located in Russia’s north, is a army rocket site, the very existence of which was not admitted until early eighties. It is used both for space launches and test firing of strategic ballistic missiles for the Russian Defense Ministry.

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