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  Cryptome Spy Photos 2

 

25 August 2006 -- 2 of a Series

Cryptome


Captions Below by Associated Press, at Right by DoD [Image]

A Scan Eagle unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) launches from a pneumatic wedge catapult launcher Aug. 23, 2006, on the flight deck of the amphibious assault ship USS Saipan (LHA 2), which is under way in the Atlantic Ocean. Scan Eagle is a UAV system designed to provide persistent intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance data, battle damage assessment and communications relay. DoD photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Patrick W. Mullen III, U.S. Navy. (Released)
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Michael Chemidlin, 58, poses in front of an apartment where he is staying temporarily Monday, July 10, 2006, in New York. Chemidlin, from Scotch Plains, N.J., is back from Sierra Leone in western Africa where he was held as an accused spy and then released after 80 days in custody. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow)

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Former Soviet spy Stig Bergling is seen in this Oct. 8, 2003 photo. Bergling who served nearly 12 years in prison for leaking military secrets to Moscow during the Cold War, said July 19, 2006 that he had become a member of the Swedish Left Party. (AP Photo/Scanpix, Drago Prulovic)

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Michael Smith, centre, greets his lawyer following his release from prison in Harare, Saturday, July, 1, 2006. Three Zimbabweans who worked as spies and saboteurs for apartheid-era South Africa were pardoned of life sentences for murder and were freed Saturday. Kevin Woods, Michael Smith and Philip Conjwayo, convicted in 1988 in a car bombing in the second city of Bulawayo, were amnestied by President Robert Mugabe on humanitarian grounds, state radio reported. (AP Photo / Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

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Philip Conjwayo, left, is hugged by his son Orbert while Kevin Woods, centre, and Michael Smith, right, walk out of prison in Harare, Saturday, July, 1, 2006. The three Zimbabweans who worked as spies and saboteurs for apartheid-era South Africa were pardoned of life sentences for murder and were freed Saturday. Kevin Woods, Michael Smith and Philip Conjwayo, convicted in 1988 in a car bombing in the second city of Bulawayo, were amnestied by President Robert Mugabe on humanitarian grounds, state radio reported. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)

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World War II veterans John Billings, 82, of Woodstock, Va, second from left, then left to right Richard Gottleber, 85, of Frankenmuth, Mich., center, and Frederick Mayer, 84, of Charles Town, W. Va., right inspect Gottleber's display at Michigan's Own Military and Space Museum in Frankenmuth, Mich., June 27, 2006. Stan Bozich, of the museum is at left. The men talked about their time together during WWII when Billings flew a B-24 and Gottleber served as the bombardier. They dropped Mayer into Nazi-controlled Austria in 1945 to spy for the United States. (AP Photo/The Saginaw News, David A Sommers)

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A Boeing Delta 4 rocket is rolled-out for liftoff at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., Tuesday, June 27, 2006. The rocket is carrying a payload for the National Reconnaissance Office, which builds and manages the nation's spy satellites. (AP Photo/Gene Blevins)

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North Korean soldiers watch USS Pueblo, which was seized by North Korean navy off the Korean coast in Jan. 1968, near Taedonggang river in Pyongyang, Thursday, June 22, 2006. North Korea's Korea News Service said the U.S. navy intelligence ship is open to the public as part of the country's anti-U.S. campaign. North Korea captured the ship, charging its crew with being on a spying mission. (AP Photo/Korea Central News Agency via Korea News Service) ** JAPAN OUT, NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT **

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This undated photo provided the US Navy shows the USNS Observation Island, fitted with a special radar known as Cobra Judy that is designed to detect, track and collect intelligence data on foreign ballistic missile tests in the Pacific. All eyes _ and ears _ are on North Korea. Military and intelligence agencies of the United States and its allies are spying from land, air, sea and space to learn whether the communist nation is preparing to test fire a long-range missile that may be capable of reaching the western U.S. (AP Photo/US Navy)

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**FILE**In this identification photo released by Florida International University, Elsa Alvarez is shown. The photo was acquired by The Miami Herald Monday, Jan. 9, 2006. Prosecutors contend that Alvarez and her husband Carlos Alvarez, a Florida International University professor, spied for Cuban President Fidel Castro's government for decades, mainly reporting on activities of Miami's large Cuban-American exile community and U.S. political developments. They were arrested in January and have pleaded not guilty to the charges. Alvarez has been freed Monday, June 19, 2006, on bond after spending five months in jail. Carlos Alvarez has not appealed the order that he be held without bond. (AP Photo/Courtesy Florida International University via The Miami Herald) ** MAGS OUT, NO SALES **

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Captain Franz Von Rintelen, in 1939, in England, was a German master spy and Saboteur in the United States during World war 1. (AP Photo) Submit Date 05/19/2006

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Ex-CIA officer Edward Lee Howard strolls along the Arbat, a pedestrian walkway in Moscow, popular for people watching, on March 22, 1995. Howard who fled to Moscow, was blamed for compromising Russians who spied for the United States. (AP Photo/Makeyeva)

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Rudolf Roessler, left, the Soviet Union's master spy of World War II, and his Swiss contact man Dr. Xavier Schnieper, are followed by a guard during their trial at Lucern, Switzerland, Nov. 2, 1953. Roessler and his accomplice are charged with violating Swiss neutrality by sending military secrets to Czechoslovakia. (AP Photo) Submit Date 05/19/2006

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CIA director nominee Michael Hayden testifies on Capitol Hill, Thursday, May 18, 2006 at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee. Hayden acknowledged concerns about civil liberties even as he vigorously defended the Bush administration's warrantless eavesdropping program as a legal spy tool needed to ensnare terrorists. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)

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Takeo Yoshikawa, former Japanese spy attached to the Japanese Consular House, in Honolulu, before and during WWII, appears on a TV programme in Tokyo, Japan, on Dec.5, 1964. Yoshikawa was involved in passing information concerning the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour. (AP Photo) Submit Date 05/19/2006

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** ADVANCE FOR SUNDAY MAY 21 AND THEREAFTER ** This image from the Library of Congress provided by Abrams Books shows actress Pauline Cushman. Cushman, who came to be known as the "Spy of the Cumberland", secured information valuable to federal forces during the Civil War, and received an honorary major's commission from President Lincoln. The image is one of nearly 500 photographs, lithographs, paintings, drawings and cartoons from the library's collection published in a new volume, "The American Civil War - 365 Days". (AP Photo/Library of Congress) Submit Date 05/17/2006

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Retired Air Force Gen. James R. Clapper, outgoing head of the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at the agency's headquarters in Bethesda, Md. Thursday, May 11, 2006. The little-known spy agency that analyzes imagery taken from the skies has been spending significantly more time watching U.S. soil. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)