Incidents

In Poland, 12 citizens of Ukraine were spying for the Russian Federation: among them a 16-year-old teenager

The recruited games were monitored by the railroad moving for Ukraine and warehouses where ammunition was stored, which were to be transferred to the defense forces. In Poland, the internal security agency exposed a network of Russian spies. Of the 16 participants, 12 citizens of Ukraine. About it writes the Polish edition of Rzeczpospolita. Some of the Russian agents who were detained in Poland are refugees who came from Ukraine after a full -scale invasion.

The youngest gaming agent was a 16-year-old Ukrainian. Most of the recruited are residents of East of Ukraine. The first nine participants of the Spy Network Agency of Poland's internal security was detained in March 2023, and subsequently a number of such detentions took place. In total, 16 people were detained on suspicion of espionage. The network was discovered after one of the passers -by noticed a camera near the railway track.

She worked on a solar battery and broadcast an online video that opened with a password. Thanks to the camera and telephone magazines, Polish investigators have installed the first participant in the network. He pointed to his curators and accomplices. GRU agents installed fifty chambers in Poland on important routes and railway nodes and recorded traffic with military and other assistance for Ukraine.

Most of the cameras were found in the Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in particular, in the vicinity of the airport near Rzeszuz. They also monitored the warehouses where ammunition and equipment for Ukraine were stored. The received images and other information were transmitted to the Russian special services. In addition, Russian spies had to diversions to paralyze the supply of equipment, weapons and assistance to Ukraine.

According to the ex -commander of Poland's ground forces, General Waldemar Sklipchak, the scale of the Russian spy network shows that "there is a huge problem in Poland. " The General believes that Polish services have to penetrate into the environment of foreigners from the East and their groups on the Internet. "It suggests that not only money but also origin and moods were at the heart of this cooperation," said Polish General Sklipchak.

In turn, the intelligence services analyst Yaroslav Yakimchyk believes that the game "gathered amateurs, that in the event of a miss there was no risk of losing valuable assets in the form of intelligence officers" - the instructions were transferred remotely, and coordinated the actions of "agents" by the officer of the game from Moscow. Recall that Poland's intelligence services have found a Russian spy network.