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  Cryptome Spy Photos 7

 

17 September 2006 -- 7 of a Series

Cryptome


Captions by Associated Press
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Karin Linstad, a leading Norwegian pro-Palestinian activist, is seen in this undated but recent file photo. Linstad, who is married to high-profile Norwegian muslim Trond Ali Linstad, claims she infiltrated the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad in the 1980s, in a new book " War and Diplomacy", written by Norwegian TV journalist Odd Karsten Tveit, being published next week.(AP Photo/ Hakon Mosvold Larsen, Scanpix) ** NORWAY OUT ** Submit Date 10/08/2005

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Photo dated Dec. 9 2005, of Denis Donaldson, centre, former Sinn Fein party official, whose body was found in Co. Donegal, Ireland, it was confirmed Tuesday April 4, 2006. The former senior official of Sinn Fein recently exposed as a British spy has been found fatally shot in northwest Ireland, police and party sources said Tuesday. Donaldson, Sinn Fein's former legislative chief in Northern Ireland's power-sharing government, admitted in December he had been on the payroll of the British secret service and the province's anti-terrorist police for the previous two decades. Behind Donaldson is Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams, right, and Martin McGuinness, left. (AP Photo / Paul Faith, PA)

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A Aug. 24, 1998 photo of Senkal Atasagun, head of the National Intelligence Organization, or MIT, looks during a meeting of the National Security Council . The Turkish press is lauding the MIT as the Israel's Mossad, whose swashbuckling exploits led to admiration in the West and fear throughout the Middle East. MIT's agents captured Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan in Kenya last February and two others in northern Iraq and in Moldova.(AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici/File)

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** FILE ** Convicted North Korean agent Shin Kwang Su looks on as his colleague reads a statement during a joint press conference by former spies at the Hyangrin Church in Seoul, South Korea, in this Aug. 28, 2000 file photo. Japan's National Police Agency asked Interpol earlier to place alleged Shin and another suspected agent on an international wanted list over their suspected separate abductions of two Japanese couples in the 1970s. Police suspecting Shin of also kidnapping of Japanese Tadaaki Hara raided the offices of a group affiliated with North Korea's de facto embassy in Japan Thursday, March 23, 2006. (AP Photo/Yun Jai-hyoung, File)

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Fugitive Russian diplomat Vladimir Petrov and his wife, leave Melbourne High Court, Australia, on July 20, 1954, after the day's secret hearing of the Royal Commission on Espionage in Australia. (AP Photo) Submit Date 03/28/2006

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** FILE ** This is an Oct. 17, 1963 file photo of Soviet spy Stig Wennerstrom entering a court of justice. Wennerstrom was a Swedish air force officer who supplied Moscow with military secrets for 15 years in Sweden's biggest Cold War espionage scandal. Wennerstrom has died. He was 99 years old. (AP Photo/Scanpix/File) ** SWEDEN OUT ** Submit Date 03/28/2006

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Igor Yakolevich Melekh, left, a Russian employed at the United Nations Headquarters, and German-born illustrator Willie Hirsch, are taken in cars from the Federal Court, in New York, on Oct. 27, 1960, to a federal lock-up. They were arrested on three counts of espionage, accused of attempting to obtain U.S. defence intelligence. (AP Photo) Submit Date 03/28/2006

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Former spy Klaus Fuchs, left, walks across the tarmac at Schoenefeld Airport, East Berlin, on June 23, 1959, after his arrival in a Polish airliner, accompanied by his nephew, Klaus Kittowski. Fuchs was released from Wakefield Prison after serving 9 1/2 years of a 14-year sentence, for passing British and American secrets to the Soviet Union. (AP Photo) Submit Date 03/28/2006

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Igor Gouzenko, former Russian cypher clerk who revealed a Soviet spy ring in Canada in 1945, wears a hood to conceal his face, during a n interview with Associated Press writer Saul Pett, in Canada, on April 29, 1954. Gouzenko still leads a double life with two identities, both of which are known only to his wife and a handful of Canadian officials. (AP Photo) Submit Date 03/28/2006

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TREPPER ARRIVES IN LONDON: Former chief of the Soviet spy organisation 'Red Chappel' during World War II, Leopold Trepper, waves as he walks down the gangway after landing in London, coming from Poland, Friday November 2, 1973. He came for a medical treatment. (AP Photo/Str) Submit Date 03/28/2006

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Convicted spy Christopher Boyce is led to a waiting plane on his way to Missouri prison, as U.S. Marshal Robert Christman looks on, Paine Field, WA, date unknown. (AP Photo) Submit Date 03/23/2006

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Christopher Boyce, 23, is led into Federal Building, Los Angeles, CA, for arraignment. Boyce and Andrew D. Lee were arrested by FBI and charged with conspiracy in connection with the sales of U.S. rocket secrets to Soviet Union. Lee was arrested in Mexico City on unrelated matter and is awaiting return to the U.S. Date unknown. (AP Photo) Submit Date 03/23/2006

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Council of Europe chairman Terry Davis adjusts his headphones during a news conference in Strasbourg, France Wednesday March 1, 2006, after publishing a report on a possible role of European countries in the alleged illegal CIA transfer of al-Qaida suspects. Davis, the chairman of Europe's leading human rights watchdog, said Wednesday that Europe is a "happy hunting ground" for foreign spies as few European countries control foreign intelligence agents operating on their territory.

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Russian scientist Andrei Zamiatnin's wife Viktoria, right, and his father Alexander Zamiatnin take part in a meeting with students at the Russian State Humanitarian University in Moscow, Thursday, March 2, 2006. Zamiatnin who working as a visiting researcher in Sweden was detained in February on suspicion of working as a spy. Zamiatnin was arrested in Uppsala, about 70 kilometers (44 miles) north of Stockholm, where he worked as a visiting researcher at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. (AP Photo/Yuri Samoligo)

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In this June 21, 2001 Department of Defense photo, a Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle is seen after its arrival at Langley Air Force Base, Va. Communications Systems-West based, in Utah, has quietly protected the nation in near anonymity, a tightlipped operation whose clients were the White House and Pentagon. You might have read about the U2 spy planes of old and more recently about unmanned aerial vehicles used to take out terrorists enclaves. Their gear came from Communication Systems. (AP Photo/Department of Defense, Tech. Sgt. Jack Braden via The Salt Lake Tribune)

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**FILE** American missionary Dave Rodman speaks during an interview at Cano Iguana, Venezuela, in this Oct. 18, 2005 file photo. Dave Rodman and his wife Susan were among some 40 missionaries who pulled out of their remote outposts ahead of a Sunday, Feb 12, 2006 deadline under strict government orders. President Hugo Chavez has accused missionaries from the U.S.-based group New Tribes Mission of spying for the CIA and exploiting indigenous communities. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano/File)