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The ANT catalog [a] (or TAO catalog) is a classified product catalog by the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) of which the version written in 2008–2009 was published by German news magazine Der Spiegel in December 2013.
Due to inadequate counterintelligence, Germany was described as a "paradise for Russian spies" and fears were expressed that foreign services would therefore no longer want to share important secret information with the FRG. [25] The suspected traitor Carsten L. was arrested in December 2022.
The Berlin Spy Museum is a private museum in Berlin which was created by former journalist Franz-Michael Günther. The museum opened to the public on 19 September 2015. Günther's aspirations were to create a museum devoted to the history of spies and espionage in the former spy capital of Germany. [1]
In 2014, an employee of BND was arrested for handing over secret documents to the United States. [52] He was suspected of handing over documents about the committee investigating the NSA spying in Germany. [52] The German government responded to this espionage by expelling the top CIA official in Berlin. [53]
The SCS program was established in 1978 during the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. [1] [4] [15]As encryption technology increased in sophistication, by the end of the 20th century many coded signals proved unbreakable.
Putin’s five-year sojourn in Dresden, which abruptly ended in 1990, has come under renewed scrutiny as the 70-year-old Russian president prosecutes an increasingly brutal and bloody war in ...
"It is a particularly serious case of alleged spy activity for (President Vladimir) Putin's criminal regime." Germany summoned the Russian ambassador over the arrests. Earlier, the Kremlin said it ...
In the books of such spy novelists as Ian Fleming, John le Carré and Tom Clancy, characters frequently engage in tradecraft, e.g. making or retrieving items from "dead drops", "dry cleaning", and wiring, using, or sweeping for intelligence gathering devices, such as cameras or microphones hidden in the subjects' quarters, vehicles, clothing, or accessories.