
#12
Rossiiskaya Gazeta
No. 239
December 23, 2002
[translation from RIA Novosti for personal use only]
INTERVIEW OF DIRECTOR OF RUSSIA'S FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE
SERVICE
Colonel-General Sergei LEBEDEV, director of Russia's Foreign
Intelligence Service, the most secret structure of Russia, talks with Yadviga
YUFEROVA and Maxim MAKARYCHEV
Insurance Policy of the State
Question: Many Russian ministries,
including the State Customs Committee, have celebrated their 200th anniversary
this year. And when was the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) created? And who
was the first Russian agent?
Answer: Nobody knows his name now but the
official birthday of the SVR is December 20, 1920, when a special department
with intelligence functions was set up in Russia.
Question: The taxpayer who is also the
voter and reader wants to know how effective the work of state structures,
including secret ones, is.
Answer: Our successes cannot be evaluated
in terms of money. Can you determine the cost of a correct political or economic
decision based on promptly acquired and faithful information? Effective
intelligence is an insurance policy of the state, which helps the national
leadership to see the world as it is. And the revenues made possible by the work
of the intelligence service are sufficiently large to maintain dozens of similar
services. The SVR is regarded as an efficient service.
Question: Do your partners abroad know
this?
Answer: They do. I think other
intelligence services are working sufficiently effectively, too, or else they
would have been liquidated long ago.
Question: This year Russia's arms sales
earned it a record high revenue of 4 billion dollars. Did your service
contribute to this achievement?
Answer: I can tell you openly that we
work hand in glove with the Committee on Military-Technical Cooperation and
Rosoboronexport, which coordinate all of their major deals with the SVR.
Exit Enemy No. 1 - Enter Threat No. 1
Question: In the past, the number one
enemy was a state. Who is Russia's main enemy now? Against who are your efforts
directed?
Answer: We are not talking about any
state as a number one enemy of Russia now. Instead, we are looking at the threat
that is facing or can face Russia. If the threat comes from a country, we
certainly do not see that country as friendly. The main threats today come from
international terrorism, organised crime and drug trafficking. The proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction is also a major threat because we cannot be sure
that maniacs will never assume control of such weapons. Ecological security is
another vital task. No country in the world, not even the powerful USA, can
stand up against these threats single-handed. We need to join forces.
Question: Maybe this will bring humankind
together?
Answer: Everybody is coming to hope so
but the threats are growing much quicker than this positive transformation.
Regrettably, old stereotypes hinder the operation of special services and an
adequate political reply to the threats.
Question: Terrorism lives not only on
ideas but also on money. Do you know who pays to Chechen terrorists or who
financed the terrorist act in the Dubrovka theatre centre?
Answer: The Nord-Ost hostage standoff
tragedy is being investigated by the Federal Security Service (FSB) and the
Interior Ministry. Our structures registered the telephone conversations between
the terrorists and their interlocutors in Turkey and the Gulf countries.
Regrettably, the terrorists have more than just a telephone connection; they
also receive money, people and weapons. We are working jointly with our partners
abroad on this problem, trying to cut short the delivery channels. Yet
satisfaction with our work will come only when we safely block these channels.
In the Minefield
Question: Do you have agents in extremist
organisations abroad? Do you work in this "minefield"?
Answer: No special service in the world
will answer this question. But you can rest assured that we are energetically
contributing to the anti-terrorist struggle. It is one of our priorities. We
regularly supply related information to the national leadership.
Question: The world is becoming
apprehensive about attacks on diplomatic missions. Are Russian diplomats
protected sufficiently well?
Answer: One of SVR functions is to ensure
the safety of Russian missions abroad. We cooperate with our foreign and defence
ministries and maintain close ties with local special services. The states whose
missions abroad have become terrorist targets are strengthening their embassies.
We try to ensure the protection of the Russian staff from the terrorist threat
already at the stage of designing embassies or acquiring buildings.
Question: Is there any regularity in spy
scandals?
Answer: I remember quite a few cases when
the counter-intelligence services of Western countries and the Russian
counter-intelligence service exposed spies who were allowed to leave the country
quietly, by the agreement of the sides. Nobody knew about this; the press did
not report this and political campaigns were not inspired against the master
country. When a scandal erupts, it is certainly a result of a political decision
sanctioned at the top.
World's Special Services under One Roof?
Question: The USA has just created a
national security ministry with powers that the KGB could envy. Does this mean
that each and everyone in the USA will grow a shadow? Maybe Russian special
services should also be integrated into one organisation?
Answer: I can judge the situation by the
plans and designs associated with the creation of this ministry. If they come
true, the ministry will indeed grow into a powerful - and, hopefully, effective
- structure. Let's wait and see what comes of it. But we should remember that
the creation of any powerful structure entails the threat of it breaking out of
control. We have seen this in Russia before. And this is why Americans also
express concern over the creation of the super-ministry.
As for the situation in the sphere of security in Russia, I think that the
services we have are sufficiently effective. Though they work separately, they
keep in close touch with each other.
Question: The SVR does not work in the
CIS countries. Maybe the time has come to review not only the visa regime but
also old agreements with some of them?
Answer: Under the 1992 Alma Ata
agreement, we do not work against each other. We have official missions in the
CIS countries, which collect information and meet with politicians and special
services staff. I would like to hope that our relations with the CIS countries
will develop in a way that will not make spying on each other necessary. The SVR
has an international staff, with quite a few former CIS citizens working well.
Our common past and age-long traditions of friendship and neighbourly life in
the union state are a good basis for developing close partner relations.
Traitors and Honour
Question: Many of modern detective
stories mention people called "cleaners," people who punish traitors.
Indeed, treason is eventually punished, by God's wrath or penal law, or the law
of the professional community. How do you punish traitors?
Answer: We don't have such a profession
now, I can assure you of this. There are no departments of this kind in the SVR
or other Russian special services. We try to convince the defectors to return to
the Motherland so as to try their case in accordance with law. I must tell you
that we succeed only rarely because every special service protects its
informers.
It was good that you mentioned God's wrath. I believe that the bulk of
traitors live in constant fear. I can tell you this on the example of several
traitors who defected to the USA and Britain. They keep changing places of
residence and their appearances without substantial reason. Theirs is not a
tranquil life.
Question: Do we have intelligence agents
in prisons abroad now?
Answer: No.
Question: Can lie detectors expose
traitors?
Answer: No lie detector in Russia or any
other country can reliably expose a traitor.
No Money in Intelligence
Question: Who comes to serve in the SVR
now and what for? Idea? Money? Save the homeland? Earn a good living?
Answer: There is no money in intelligence
but there are other attractions. I want to say that the boys we choose for the
Foreign Intelligence Academy - and choosing is a very long process, as we study
people for years - are very good. We are satisfied with our choice. We had
problems in the early and mid-1990s but things have changed after that and now
we have no problems with choosing personnel.
Question: Is there an entrance
competition?
Answer: Yes, and we are glad that we have
many aspirants to choose from.
Question: Has the fact that the President
worked in the intelligence service improved your image?
Answer: Frankly speaking, this helps the
service and me as its director. The President understands how the service
operates and we talk the same language, which greatly simplifies our job.
Retired Chekists Are Still in Demand
Question: It is said that there is no
such thing as ex-intelligence officers. But professionals in your service retire
rather early. How do they fare afterwards?
Answer: Former intelligence officers are
in demand everywhere. Reliability, knowledge of foreign languages, the ability
to analyse the situation and draw correct conclusions, as well as experience in
dealing with people are highly valued in all establishments. Many of our former
staff hold important posts in state and commercial structures.
* * *
Colonel-General Sergei LEBEDEV joined the KGB in 1973 and was dispatched to
the foreign intelligence department (the First Chief Directorate of the KGB) in
1975. He graduated (cum laude) from the Diplomatic Academy of the Soviet Foreign
Ministry in 1978 and speaks German and English. In 1998-2000 he was the official
representative of the SVR in the USA.
On May 20, 2000 he was appointed director of Russia's Foreign Intelligence
Service by President's decree.
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