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The FBI obviously hopes that continued questioning of the alleged spies could turn up information that leads to more dangerous operations, but the evidence produced so far appears fairly mundane. So what was the Kremlin hoping to gain? The Russians actually reduced their espionage operations under the leadership of Boris Yeltsin in the first years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the former senior official noted. The U.S. never did. The Russian approach changed when Vladimir Putin -- who had spent his career in the KGB
-- took over from the ailing Yeltsin. Russia now has renewed and strengthened his intelligence presence in the United States, with much greater focus on the commercial and technological world than on government secrets, the former official said. The spy business now is less about the ideological fight for geographic spheres of influence. The big prizes these days are secrets pried from board rooms and laboratories, the heavy weapons of expanded national economic reach in the global marketplace. Then there's this from John L. Martin, who supervised the Justice Department's spying prosecutions for 27 years: "They run these kind of operations, and even though they may not appear productive on the surface, they run them as art for art's sake. "They run them," he said, "because they can and they think they can get away with it. This time they didn't get away with it. They got caught."
[Associated
Press;
Steven R. Hurst, a former Moscow correspondent, has written about international relations for 30 years.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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