News you may have missed #0270
January 27, 2010 Leave a comment
- S. Korean court orders damages in alleged spy case. Lee Soo-geun was a senior North Korean government apparatchik, who defected to the South and joined its intelligence service in 1967. Later, however, when he attempted to flee to a third country, he was arrested by South Korean counterintelligence agents, charged with working as a double agent, and shot. But now a court in Seoul has concluded that Lee’s confession was extracted by force, and has ordered that damages be paid to Lee’s niece, who was imprisoned for allegedly helping him.
- Belarus reshuffles KGB leadership. Last week, Belorussian President Alexander Lukashenko carried out a major reshuffle in the country’s State Security Committee (KGB), a surprise move which affected all KGB deputy chairs and regional department heads. Retired KGB lieutenant colonel Valery Kostka explains the reasoning behind the reshuffle.







News you may have missed #356
May 21, 2010 by intelNews 1 Comment
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with 0 Israeli IDF soldiers fall prey to Facebook spy, 0 More alleged Korean double spies dispute charges, 0 US intel failures facilitated Christmas bomb plot: Senate report, Facebook, Hezbollah, IDF, Israel, Lee Soo-geun, News, news you may have missed, social networking, South Korea, torture, Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab, US Senate Select Committee on Intelligence