Russian duma member Andrey Lugovoy - a prime suspect in the dramatic radiation assassination of FSB turncoat Alexander Litvinenko - has passed a polygraph test administered by private technicians, possibly clearing him of involvement in the 2006 killing of Litvinenko in London, where he was living after alleging Russian involvement in the 1999 Moscow apartment bombings. Information on the qualifications or affiliation of the polygraph technicians wasn’t provided.
Which Obama Cabinet Secretary Did Russian SVR Agent Seduce?
Did a Juliet agent in the Anna Chapman spy ring come close to seducing an Obama cabinet secretary in 2010? That possibility was among startling revelations made by a senior official of the U.S. FBI to the UK’s official state media, the BBC, ABC reports.
Frank Figliuzzi, Assistant Director of Counter-Intelligence for the FBI, said the decision to break-up the Russian espionage operation came when it did because, “we were becoming very concerned they were getting close enough to a sitting U.S. cabinet member that we thought we could no longer allow this to continue.”
Col. Stanislav Lunev, Russian defector from the GRU, publicly reveals for the first time - in a September 1998 interview with radio host Art Bell - the name of a Russian seismic weapon: “Mercury 18.”
In the interview, Col. Lunev claims the 1988 earthquake in Spitak, Armenia was the result of Mercury 18 testing. One month after these remarks - in which Lunev claims testing of Mercury 18 is then occurring in Chechnya - a 5.8 earthquake struck that region.






