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Reuters
Reuters
Politics
By Mark Trevelyan

Kremlin says its spies are watching as CIA urges Russians to get in touch

A Russian armoured personnel carrier and S-400 surface-to-air missile systems drive past the Kremlin wall after a military parade on Victory Day, which marks the 78th anniversary of the victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, in Moscow, Russia May 9, 2023. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/File Photo

The Kremlin said on Tuesday its agencies were tracking Western spy activity after the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency published a video encouraging Russians to make contact via a secure internet channel.

The short video in Russian was accompanied by a text saying the agency wanted to hear from military officers, intelligence specialists, diplomats, scientists and people with information about Russia's economy and its leadership.

"Contact us. Perhaps the people around you don't want to hear the truth. We want to," the text said.

Published nearly 15 months into Moscow's war with Ukraine, the video invites Russians to take a colossal risk. President Vladimir Putin has warned his compatriots to be on their guard against traitors, and parliament last month voted to increase the penalty for state treason from 20 years to life in prison.

In the video - published on the CIA's official YouTube channel and the Telegram messaging app, popular in Russia - a male voice reflects on the meaning of heroism and endurance as lone individuals are seen weighing their decisions: a man trudging through snow, a woman staring through a window.

"We are easily swayed by lies. But we do know what our reality is. The reality we live in. And the reality we talk about in whispers," the voice says.

At the end, a man and a woman are shown in separate scenes with their fingers hovering over mobile phone screens with a link saying "Contact CIA".

"This is my Russia. This will always be my Russia. I will endure. My family will endure. We will live with dignity because of my actions," the narrator concludes.

Asked about the video, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said he had not paid attention to it, but added: "I am convinced that our special services are monitoring this space in the necessary way."

He added: "We all know perfectly well that the CIA and other Western intelligence services are not reducing their activity on the territory of our country."

Some Russians reacted sceptically to the video on social media, saying it looked like a "provocation" by Russia's FSB security service.

The text accompanying it said contact could take place securely via Tor, a system for anonymous online communication. It directed viewers to another video for instructions on how to use Tor.

"The CIA wants to know the truth about #Russia, and we are looking for reliable people who know and can tell us this truth," it said. "Your information may be more valuable than you think."

(Reporting by Reuters, writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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