Dutch intelligence says it’s uncovered 2 Russian spies
A Dutch intelligence agency said Thursday that it
has uncovered two Russian spies who were targeting the Netherlands’ science and
technology sector, a move likely to further strain tense relations between the
two countries.
The General Intelligence and Security Service, known
by its Dutch acronym AIVD, said the agents worked at the Russian embassy and
had diplomatic accreditation. Both have been declared “persona non grata” by
the foreign ministry meaning they can no longer work as diplomats and will have
to leave the country.
“We protect our country’s strategic interests by
gathering intelligence and using that information to expose espionage,” said
AIVD Director General Erik Akerboom. “That way we can disrupt these espionage
attempts, as we have done here.”
The senior spy was seeking information on artificial
intelligence, semiconductors, and nanotechnology, the AIVD said. “This
technology has civil as well as military applications, including in weapons
systems,” it added.
The agency said that the officers both worked for
Russia’s civil intelligence agency known as SVR. One of them built a network of
sources who work or used to work in the high-tech sector in the Netherlands,
the AIVD said, the second agent “played a supporting role.”
“Some of these individuals received payment from the
intelligence officer in exchange for information,” the agency said.
The Russian embassy in The Hague did not immediately
respond to a phone call and text message seeking comment on Thursday’s
announcement.
Dutch-Russian relations have been under severe
strain for years. The two countries have long been at odds over the
investigation into the downing in 2014 of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over
conflict-ravaged eastern Ukraine.
The Netherlands has said it holds Russia legally responsible
for the downing, which killed all 298 passengers and crew on the
Amsterdam-Kuala Lumpur flight. Prosecutors say the passenger jet was shot down
with a Buk missile that was transported into Ukraine from a Russian military
base. Moscow has always denied involvement.
In 2018, the Dutch government also accused Russia’s
military intelligence unit of attempted cybercrimes targeting the international
chemical weapons watchdog and the investigation into the downing of the
Malaysia Airlines plane.
The Dutch announcement came just a day after Danish
prosecutors said a Russian citizen living in Denmark had been charged with
espionage for allegedly having provided information about Danish energy
technology, among other things, to an unnamed Russian intelligence service.



