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  Cryptome Spy Photos 1

 

25 August 2006 -- 1 of a Series

Cryptome


Captions by Associated Press
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Fidel Castro expert and former CIA officer Brian Latell, center, signs a copy of his book, "After Fidel, The Inside Story of Castro's Regime and Cuba's Next Leader," for Bertrand Guillotin, right, Thursday, Aug. 24, 2006, during the annual Raleigh International Spy Conference in Raleigh, N.C. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

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Tim Naftali, author and scholar at the University of Virginia, speaks about Fidel Castro during the annual Raleigh International Spy Conference, Thursday, Aug. 24, 2006, in Raleigh, N.C. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

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** ILLUSTRATOR FOR ROMANIA SECRETS REVEALED BY ALISON MUTLER** A man looks at files of Romania's former communist regime's Securitate secret police at the headquarters of the National Council for Studying the Securitate Archives (CNSAS) in Leordeni, southern outskirts of Bucharest, March 10, 2005.In Internet chats, TV talks shows and cafe conversation, the topic is on everybody's lips: The opening of files by Romania's dreaded secret police that have been buried since the fall of communism 17 years ago. The documents contain a portrait of a paranoid state that forced friend to spy on friend, lovers to betray each other to police, and informants to scour poems for signs of subversion.(AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda)

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Alleged Israeli spy Victorine Nino, alias Marcelle, one of the thirteen accused of spying, reads an arabic newspaper in the Supreme Military Court during a recess of the trial, in Cairo, Egypt, Dec. 11, 1954. Nino was employed by a local British firm in Cairo. At left is an Egyptian policeman (AP Photo) Submit Date 08/17/2006

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Alleged Israeli spy Max Bennet, one of the thirteen accused of spying, enters the Supreme Military Court for the start of the trial, in Cairo, Egypt, Dec. 11, 1954. Cohen was employed Anglo-Egyptian Motors Company in Cairo. This is the last known picture of Bennett alive, as he committed suicide by slashing his wrists. (AP Photo) Submit Date 08/17/2006

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Alleged Israeli spy Max Bennet, one of the thirteen accused of spying,was found dead in his cell in a Cairo Prison, in Cairo, Egypt, Dec. 21, 1954. Cohen was employed Anglo-Egyptian Motors Company in Cairo. Bennett committed suicide by slashing his wrists. (AP Photo) Submit Date 08/17/2006

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A vote is taken during a meeting in the mechanical repair shop at the First State Ball-Bearing Plant in Moscow, Jan. 1937. The workers were voting for a resolution to execute military spies and saboteurs. (AP Photo/Soyuzphoto) Submit Date 08/16/2006

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Ching Cheong, Chief China Correspondent for Singapore's the Straits Times newspaper, is seen in this undated file photo. The trial of the Hong Kong reporter arrested in China on spying charges began Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2006. Hong Kong Cable television and a human rights activist said. The news station said a duty officer at the Beijing No. 2 Intermediate Court confirmed that the trial of Ching, a China correspondent for the Straits Times, Singapore's largest newspaper, had started. A spokeswoman for the Beijing No.2 Intermediate Court reached by telephone said it was "not convenient " for her to confirm whether Ching was scheduled to stand trial. (AP Photo/The Straits Times)

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Whittaker Chambers, confessed courier for Russian spies, testifies before a Senate Judiciary Internal Security Subcommittee, in New York, Aug. 16, 1951, about Red infiltration in the United States. (AP Photo) Submit Date 08/14/2006

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A former South Korean spy who penetrated into North Korea, holds a head of a doll of Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi during anti-Japan rally against Koizumi's war shrine visit near the Japanese embassy in Seoul, Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2006. South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun on Tuesday urged Japan to repent for its past history and take substantial steps to resolve the dispute over the war shrine that critics say glorifies Japan's militarist past. The letters on the banner read " Oppose war shrine visit." (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

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Sergei Skripal speaks to his lawyer from behind bars seen on a screen of a monitor outside a courtroom in Moscow on Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2006. Skripal a retired Russian colonel recruited by British intelligence in the mid-1990s was sentenced Wednesday by a military court in Moscow to 13 years imprisonment for spying, officials said. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze)

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Expelled Pakistani diplomat Mohammed Rafique, left, shakes hand with a journalist upon his arrival at Islamabad airport, Pakistan on Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. Pakistan and India have expelled each other's diplomats over spying allegations. The expulsion of an Indian diplomat, who was allegedly caught with "sensitive documents," from Pakistan amid allegations of spying should not affect the peace process between the rival South Asian nations, Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said. (AP Photo)

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Prisoners in Kandahar's jail pray during Eid al-Fitr, at the end of Ramadan, Sunday, Dec. 16, 2001. A few dozen prisoners are still held in the jail, mostly for petty crimes, including five foreign prisoners who were detained by the previous Taliban administration on spying charges. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay) Submit Date 08/02/2006

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This 1995 photo shows an overview of Moscow's Lefortovo prison, where a Russian state employee charged with spying for Britain is reportedly being kept. The man's arrest, announced earlier this week, and the threatened expulsion of nine British diplomats over the case might develop into the biggest East-West spy row since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Some veteran spies and analysts suggest the harsh Russian response was meant to boost President Boris Yeltsin's re-election chances. (AP Photo/SergeiKarpukhin) Submit Date 07/21/2006

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This photo provided by the Shaver Family shows a black and white portrait of Navy Lt. James Brayton Deane Jr. taken in 1956. In August 1956 Deane, Jr., a newlywed Navy pilot was shot out of the sky on a nighttime spy flight off the coast of China. Nearly half a century later a famous friend, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, found himself in Beijing with a chance to quietly press Chinese leaders for more cooperation in resolving Deane's fate. (AP Photo/Courtesy of the Beverly Deane Shaver Family) Submit Date 05/06/2006

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This image dated Friday April 28, 2006, from the Israeli spy satellite Eros B, and made available by the Israeli company ImageSat International NV, on Sunday April 30, 2006, one of the first high-quality images reported to show the Kassala airport in southern Sudan. The Eros B was launched last week from Russia and will remain in orbit for up to 6-years with the purpose to track Iran's nuclear program at a time when Tehran is refusing to comply with U.N. demands to halt uranium enrichment and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is calling for Israel's destruction. (AP Photo/ImageSat)