BREAKING: The CIA exfiltrated a spy out of Russia b/c Trump kept blabbing; 2016 INTERFERENCE SOURCE!

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...820f70-d344-11e9-9343-40db57cf6abd_story.html

U.S. got key asset out of Russia following election hacking
Ellen Nakashima
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September 9 at 7:38 PM
In 2017, the United States extracted from Russia an important CIA source who had provided information about the Kremlin’s interference in the 2016 presidential election, according to current and former officials.

The operation, known as an exfiltration, followed mounting concerns among U.S. officials that the individual, whose identity is unknown, could be discovered by the Russian government.

The exfiltration took place sometime after an Oval Office meeting in May 2017, when President Trump revealed highly classified counterterrorism information to the Russian foreign minister and ambassador, said the current and former officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive operation.

That disclosure alarmed U.S. national security officials, but it was not the reason for the decision to remove the CIA asset, who had provided information to the United States for more than a decade,
according to the current and former officials.

The exfiltration was first reported by CNN. The CIA declined to comment.

U.S. officials had been concerned that Russian sources could be at risk of exposure as early as the fall of 2016, when the Obama administration first confirmed that Russia had stolen and publicly disclosed emails from the Democratic National Committee and the account of Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman, John Podesta.

In October 2016, the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said in a joint statement that intelligence agencies were “confident that the Russian Government directed” the hacking campaign.

“We believe . . . that only Russia’s senior-most officials could have authorized these activities,” the statement said.

Earlier drafts of the statement had accused Russian President Vladimir Putin by name, but the reference was removed out of concern that it could endanger sources and methods,
The Washington Post reported.

In January 2017, the Obama administration published a detailed assessment that unambiguously laid the blame on the Kremlin, concluding that “Putin ordered an influence campaign” and that Russia’s goal was to undermine faith in the U.S. democratic process and harm Clinton’s chances at winning.

“That’s a pretty remarkable intelligence community product — much more specific than what you normally see,” one U.S. official said. “It’s very expected that potential U.S. intelligence assets in Russia would be under a higher level of scrutiny by their own intelligence services.”

“It’s quite likely,” the official continued, “that the U.S. intelligence community would already be taking a hard look at extracting any U.S. assets who would have been subject to increased levels of scrutiny” following the assessment’s publication. Part of it relied on communications intercepts and human intelligence, the official said. The Russians “undoubtedly would have been conducting a review as to who within Putin’s inner circle would have had access to the information.”

Last year, Russian operatives traveled to England and used a nerve agent to try to kill a former Russian military intelligence officer, Sergei Skripal, who had become a British spy, according to U.S. and British officials. In 2006, Russian operatives killed former intelligence officer Alexander Litvinenko in London by placing radioactive material in his tea, according to a British investigation.

Current and former officials said an exfiltration is a methodical process not normally triggered by a single event. It takes time to arrange for the asset, and potentially family members, to be secretly removed from the country and resettled.

Serving as an asset or informant is dangerous work, and as the potential for exposure increases, “then it’s not a surprise that these people are extracted,” said one former senior U.S. official. “That’s the good news story.”

The current location of the Russian asset is not known.
 
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Russia investigated disappearance of suspected US spy as possible murder

Russia investigated disappearance of suspected US spy as possible murder

Oleg Smolenkov hadn’t been seen after he went on holiday in 2017, but Russian authorities concluded he had fled abroad

Marc Bennetts in Moscow, Julian Borger in Washington and Luke Harding in London

Tue 10 Sep 2019 17.16 EDT First published on Tue 10 Sep 2019 11.53 EDT

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The Kremlin in Moscow in 2018. Photograph: Mladen Antonov/AFP/Getty Images
The CIA Russian spy drama currently gripping Washington has taken a new turn as Russian media reported that a suspected US mole inside the Kremlin was a member of Vladimir Putin’s administration who disappeared in 2017 and was initially thought to have been murdered.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, confirmed the man, Oleg Smolenkov, had worked for the Kremlin but played down his importance, insisting he was a low-level employee who had been fired two years ago.

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US removed covert source in Russia due to safety concerns under Trump – report
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The Russian news site Daily Storm reported in September 2017 that Smolenkov, who had once worked in the Russian embassy in Washington, had not been seen since he went on holiday with his wife and three children to Montenegro in June of that year. The Russian authorities first investigated the disappearance as a possible murder but then became convinced that Smolenkov was still alive and living abroad.

On Monday night, the New York Times and Washington Post confirmed a CNN report that a US agent inside the Kremlin had been spirited out to the US after concerns about his safety, but they did not name the spy.

The US reports said that the agent had worked for US intelligence for more than a decade and reached a senior level with access to Putin himself. According to CNN, he had even provided pictures of documents on Putin’s desk.

But there were different versions of the motivation for the emergency “exfiltration”. One source told CNN that the decision was driven partly by Donald Trump’s divulging classified information to Russian foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, and Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, in an Oval Office meeting on 10 May 2017, a month before the exfiltration.

Trump had fired the FBI director, James Comey, the previous day at a time when the bureau was the midst of an investigation into Russian interference in the 2106 presidential election.

The New York Times and Washington Post, however, quoted sources as saying that the agent was persuaded to leave Russia amid increased scrutiny by Kremlin officials after US intelligence agencies revealed what they knew about Russian election interference, and in particular, Putin’s role in it.

Peskov dismissed the US reporting as “pulp fiction”.

The Kremlin spokesman said he could not confirm that Smolenkov was the longtime American agent referred into in the US reports. Speaking on Tuesday, Peskov said Smolenkov had no “contacts” with Putin, and was removed from his government post in 2016 or 2017.


“Smolenkov worked for the presidential executive office but he was discharged in line with an internal directive several years ago,” Peskov said in Moscow. “I do not know whether he was an agent or not. The only thing I can tell you there was such an employee in the administration. He was dismissed.”

Peskov also downplayed the accounts of an extraordinary operation in 2017 to exfiltrate the US asset from Moscow.

“All this discussion by American media about who was urgently evacuated, who was saved from whom and so on are in the genre of pulp fiction,” said Peskov. “So let’s leave it up to them.”

Peskov refused to be drawn on Smolenkov’s current whereabouts. “We are not engaged in tracing people. I can only say in this case that there really was such an employee of the administration, and that he was fired several years ago,” he said.

Smolenkov is reported to have worked at the US embassy in Washington under the ambassador Yuri Ushakov. He then followed the ambassador back to Moscow in 2008, when Ushakov was appointed Putin’s foreign policy adviser. Putin served as prime minister from 2008 until 2012, when he returned to the Kremlin for a third presidential term.

Kommersant, a Russian business daily, cited former colleagues as saying that, contrary to Peskov’s denials, Smolenkov did have direct access to Putin. “This is serious,” an unnamed official said. Another said that it was unlikely Smolenkov had sight of secret material of value to the US intelligence services.

According to the New York Times, the CIA first tried in late 2016 to extract the source from Moscow. The informant at first refused, citing family concerns – prompting doubts about his trustworthiness, and unhappiness inside CIA headquarters. The source finally agreed to flee months later, as the story of Russia’s clandestine support for Trump dominated the headline, the paper said.

Smolenkov vanished on 14 June 2017, from his family home in Kargopolskaya Street, in a northern suburb of Moscow, Russian media reported. He flew with his wife Antonina, a civil servant, and their children – girls aged two and seven, and a 13-year-old son – to Montenegro. The family did not return and switched off their social media accounts.

With Smolenkov nowhere to be found, in September 2017 Russian authorities opened a criminal investigation into his suspected murder. Russia’s FSB spy agency eventually dropped the case after concluding that the missing government official was still alive, the Daily Storm reported.

The source appears to have settled in the US, in a comfortable house on the outskirts of Washington. In June 2018 the Washington Post’s real estate section listed the purchase of a six-bedroom home in Stafford, Virginia, by Antonina Smolenkov and one Oleg “Smokenkov”. The property cost $925,000. The difference in spellings appears to be a mistake.

CNN reported that the difficult decision to remove the US’s Moscow mole was made after President Trump divulged top secret information in May 2017 to Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s veteran foreign minister.

The White House has rubbished such claims. On Tuesday, Mike Pompeo – the US secretary of state and former CIA head – said: “Suffice it to say that the reporting there is factually wrong,” without specifying exactly what he was disputing.

The source’s removal would have dealt a significant blow to the US’s ability to understand top-level Kremlin decision making. The Russian government – largely made up of former KGB officers, now in their mid-60s – is paranoid about western spies.

Former diplomats say the chaotic nature of Russia in the 1990s under Boris Yeltsin made it a fertile time for recruiting Russian assets. One of those hired by MI6 during this period was Sergei Skripal, who the British say was targeted for murder by two Russian assasins.
 

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If you're grown and you still believe this Russia vs the USA shyt, I feel sawry for your mutha...

These countries are selling weapons all over the world and arming regimes that takeover countries and allow them to extract cheap labor and vast wealth from.

Be it Russia, France, USA, BRITAIN, VATICAN or whatever fuxing group of caucasians aristocratic families and/or military order is masquerading behind some country name or flag, they RUNNING THE SAME GAME.

Its starting to seem like this shyt is poorly scripted. And of course we have an actor president. The new Reagan...even has with William Barr as an accessory.
 
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☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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If you're grown and you still believe this Russia vs the USA shyt, I feel sawry for your mutha...

These countries are selling weapons all over the world and arming regimes that takeover countries and allow them to extract cheap labor and vast wealth from.

Be it Russia, France, USA, BRITAIN, VATICAN or whatever fuxing group of caucasians aristocratic families and/or military order is masquerading behind some country name or flag, they RUNNING THE SAME GAME.

Its starting to seem like this shyt is poorly scripted. And of course we have an actor president. The new Reagan...even has with William Barr as an accessory.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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BREAKING NEWS: CIA's Kremlin 'agent' is pictured for the first time as Kremlin insider warns source who photographed documents on Putin's desk could end up 'dead in a parking lot' after fleeing to the U.S.
  • Oleg Smolenkov has been pictured for the first time in a photo of him as a Russian foreign ministry employee
  • The 50-year-old has been widely named in Russia as the CIA asset who was 'exfiltrated' last year by the agency amid fears he was in danger
  • He then lived outside Washington D.C. in a $925,000 home under his own name for a year before he was outed
  • He's believed to have photographed secret documents on Putin's desk and provided intelligence about Russia's attempts to interfere in the 2016 election
  • Former FSB general Aleksandr Mikhailov, 68, said that it was 'unlikely' Russia would seek to assassinate the ex-chief of staff for Yuri Ushakov
  • When asked if Smolenkov's case would be like the UK's Skripal case, he replied: 'Or a burglar in the parking lot will break his head'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7456677/CIAs-Kremlin-agent-pictured-time.html#comments
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Local media released a photo on Thursday of suspected defector Oleg Smolenkov when he was a Russian foreign ministry employee

This is the Kremlin official who is believed to have photographed and shared documents on Russian President Vladmir Putin's desk.

Smolenkov, 50, has been widely named in Russia as the CIA asset who was 'exfiltrated' last year by the agency amid fears he was in danger then lived outside Washington D.C. under his own name for a year before being outed.

Local media released a photo on Thursday of the suspected defector when he was a Russian foreign ministry employee.

Smolenkov, was an aide to Yuri Ushakov first at the Russian embassy in Washington D.C. in the early 2000s - Ushakov was Kremlin ambassador to the U.S. from 1999 to 2008 - and then in the Kremlin, where Ushakov was seen as Putin's most powerful foreign affairs adviser.

He has been said to have been so close to Putin that he could photograph secret documents on the Kremlin strongman's desk, and provided key intelligence about Russia's attempts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election.

The Kremlin foreign minister has denied there was a mole and claimed the proof was that there was no election interference.

In Moscow, Russia said it had formally asked the United States via Interpol to confirm the whereabouts of the former Kremlin official, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said Thursday.

Zakharova said Russia had opened a criminal case after their disappearance and had now learned via the media that Smolenkov and his family were in the United States.

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Center of the claims: The CIA is said to have had a mole at the heart of Vladimir Putin's Kremlin until May 2017.

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Former FSB general Aleksandr Mikhailov, 68, said that it was 'unlikely' Russia would seek to assassinate the ex-chief of staff for Yuri Ushakov - but said Smolenkov could 'end up with his head broken'

'Of course this information needs checking via the appropriate channels,' said Zakharova.

His identity as the CIA's mole has been widely reported in Moscow but not confirmed in Washington.

Meanwhile former FSB general Aleksandr Mikhailov, 68, claimed that it was 'unlikely' Russia would seek to assassinate the ex-chief of staff of Putin's powerful foreign affairs aide - but he still predicted a gruesome fate for the turncoat.

He was asked in an interview about Smolenkov living openly and under his own name in Virginia.

'There may be several reasons - first, the American intelligence agencies do not see any danger for him,' he said.

'Second, they simply do not need him anymore.

'He told everything that he could, so now his fate in principle does not bother them.'

But he also claimed that America may be staging a 'provocation' over the revelation on Smolenkov.

When asked by reporters if it could be like the Skripal case in Britain - when former GRU spy Sergei Skripal, who spied for MI6, and his daughter Yulia, were poisoned with chemical warfare agent and the Kremlin will be blamed everything again.'

He replied: '[Like that] for example.

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Russian media have identified the alleged CIA spy in the Kremlin as Oleg Smolenkov, an aide to former ambassador to the U.S. Yury Ushakov (pictured in April this year)

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Boast: Oleg Smolenkov carried this bound and embossed notebook labeled Administration of the President of the Russian Federation, a family member posted on social media

'Or a burglar in the parking lot will break his head.

'There are many options.

'Americans are very good at counting money.

Fears for Russian mole after poison attack in Britain
Intelligence officials fear that the mole who was extracted from Moscow may still be under threat in the United States.

Those fears appear well-founded after another former Russian spy, Sergei Skripal, was poisoned in Britain in March last year.

Two Russian assassins smeared the nerve agent Novichok on Skripal's front door in Salisbury after flying over from Moscow, UK authorities say.

Sergei and his daughter Yulia Skripal were taken seriously ill but both survived.

However, another woman died after she was accidentally exposed to the Soviet-era nerve agent.

Britain accused the Kremlin and its GRU intelligence chiefs of ordering the attack, sparking a wave of diplomatic expulsions.

UK police identified two men, Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, as the hit-men and the government said Putin was 'ultimately responsible' for the poisonings.

But Russia's government has denied all involvement and the two men claimed in a bizarre interview that they were only there to see Salisbury's cathedral.

Skripal was a Russian military intelligence officer who was convicted of spying for Britain.

He was imprisoned in Russia and released as part of a spy swap with the West, which took place in Vienna in 2010.

His current whereabouts are unknown.

In 2006 another former Russian agent, Alexander Litvinenko, was killed by a radioactive poison at a London hotel.

A public inquiry concluded that he had been murdered by Russian intelligence, likely with the approval of President Vladimir Putin.

Similarly, Britain named two suspects but the Kremlin denied everything.

'They do nothing by chance, they are trying to calculate everything in terms of possible losses or gains.'

Mikhailov was former spokesman for both the Soviet era KGB and its successor the FSB.

Now in business, he frequently comments on issues involving the secret services.

He also worked in a senior role in Russian government communications as Putin took control two decades ago.

He claimed the CIA 'know that Russia will not go for, say, elimination of the defector. There is no need.

'Moreover, his murder is likely to be turned into another scandal, like the story with the Skripals.

'This is reputation loss, a ready-made scandal for the Russian leadership. The Americans do not even need to do anything. Do we need this?

'Especially given that we have a legal state.

'It is unlikely that we will make such a decision.

'Anyway, why kill him if he already told everything?

'Here we certainly impose a kind of conspiracy theology, but in reality everything can be much simpler.'

He claimed the leak of Smolenkov's defection may have been made public to reheat the story about Russian interference in the US election.

It may have been 'in anticipation of the upcoming presidential election in the United States.'

The New York Times reported that the Kremlin source used by the CIA had been 'instrumental' in concluding that Putin ordered the disruption of the 2016 election and wanted Trump elected.

That would track closely with what Steele wrote about his source's information.

There is little doubt Smolenkov was a key Kremlin figure; he was known to carry a gold-embossed notebook marked 'Administration of the President of the Russian Federation.'

Vedomosti newspaper in Moscow reported Wednesday that 'he had access to quite sensitive information,' according to a source with secret services links.

This included 'information of the intelligence services.'

He had the potential to inflict 'quite significant damage' to Russia, it was reported.

Smolenkov has not been seen at his $925,000 home in Stafford, VA, since CNN reported that there had been a CIA mole at the heart of the Putin regime.

It is not the first time he has vanished - he had previously gone missing in May 2017, a month after Trump hosted Kislyak and Sergei Lavrov, Putin's foreign minister, in the Oval Office.

Smolenkov went to Montenegro with his family after obtaining permission from his management and registering his vacation with the secret services and other officials.

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Virginia home: Oleg Smolenkov and his wife Antonia bought this $925,000, six-bedroom home on a cul-de-sac in Stafford, VA, a suburb close to Quantico

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The backyard of the Virginia home is a far-cry from his home in a Moscow tower

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Dingy: The former home of the Smolenkov family is nine miles north of the Kremlin and a far cry from their Virginia six-bedroom spread

'He did not return and switched off all means of communication' including private phones and emails, said Vedomosti citing its sources.

'But even then his acquaintances did not suppose that Smolenkov could be a CIA agent.

'Practically everyone thought that something bad happened to him or an accident.'


Smolenkov, 50, left behind a $167,000 Moscow apartment and according to public property records, bought a six-bedroom house in Stafford, Virginia - a suburb south of Washington D.C. and close to the FBI and Marine bases in Quantico - for $925,000 the next year.

The house on a cul-de-sac has been deserted since Monday, and neighbors claimed the family had vanished after CNN revealed that the CIA had ordered its most valued asset to be 'exfiltrated' from Moscow in May 2017 - and after an NBC correspondent approached the home.

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Reports claimed the decision to remove the spy was taken after Donald Trump's Oval Office meeting with Russian officials in 2017 (left, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov; right, ambassador Sergei Kislyak)

Initial reporting from CNN on Monday described a panic inside the agency after a 2017 Oval Office meeting where Trump sparked fears about what reporters called a casual approach to handling top secret intelligence.

Trump had met with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov and then-ambassador to the U.S. Sergei Kislyak.

A photographer employed by a Russian state-run news agency was allowed into the meeting, but no American journalists were permitted to witness it. Reports later described Trump seizing a U.S. translator's notes to stop them from circulating inside his administration.

By Tuesday the spy saga had flipped around, with The New York Times and other media outlets correcting the timeline to show the CIA had hatched its plan to 'exfiltrate' the spy in 2016 – while Trump was running for office.

The U.S. government has not confirmed the identity of Smolenkov as the asset whose exfiltration was ordered by the CIA amid fears he would be exposed.

There were also concerns that Smolenkov, a twice-married aide to a senior former diplomat, may himself have been a double agent when he turned down the first request from the CIA to get out of Russia.
 

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"Initial reporting from CNN on Monday described a panic inside the agency after a 2017 Oval Office meeting where Trump sparked fears about what reporters called a casual approach to handling top secret intelligence.

Trump had met with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov and then-ambassador to the U.S. Sergei Kislyak.

A photographer employed by a Russian state-run news agency was allowed into the meeting, but no American journalists were permitted to witness it. Reports later described Trump seizing a U.S. translator's notes to stop them from circulating inside his administration."


Puzzy azz Democrats. This alone is impeachment worthy. The impeachment criteria were put in place for this type of President. If you're not gonna impeach this traitor then remove the shyt from the Constitution. :mindblown:

This dude passed US Govt classified info to a foreign govt, behind closed doors, with no US official present, and he took the aids notes. Also, Trump has done that twice. Like WTF.
 
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