News

DATE=11/30/1999 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=RUSSIA / U-S ESPIONAGE (L) NUMBER=2-256664 BYLINE=PETER HEINLEIN DATELINE=MOSCOW CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: Russia has accused a U-S diplomat of trying to steal military secrets, adding a further complication to the already troubled relationship between Moscow and Washington. V-O-A's Peter Heinlein in Moscow reports the incident comes at a time of growing anti- American sentiment in Russia. TEXT: Russia's Federal Security Service, known as the F-S-B, says a young U-S diplomat from the U-S embassy in Moscow was caught Monday trying to obtain "military and strategic information" from a Russian citizen. The F-S-B, the main successor agency of the Soviet K- G-B, did not release the diplomat's name. But the semi-official Interfax news agency identified her as 33-year old Cheri Leberknight, a junior officer in the U-S embassy's political-military section. The state- run television service showed her photograph. In an interview broadcast on Russian television, F-S-B spokesman Alexander Zdanovich said the woman was briefly detained, then turned over to embassy officials. But he said the F-S-B had confiscated equipment used in espionage. /// ZDANOVICH ACT ONE - IN RUSSIAN - FADE UNDER /// He says, "We confiscated a detailed map of the meeting place, along with some special equipment for listening to conversations of people who might be following her, and some tablets for secret writing." A U-S embassy spokesman would neither confirm nor deny the incident, and referred all questions to the State Department. News reports immediately noted that the incident came the same day as the announcement in Washington that a U-S Navy petty officer had been charged with spying for Russia. But F-S-B spokesman Zdanovich denied there was any connection. /// ZDANOVICH ACT TWO - IN RUSSIAN - FADE UNDER /// He says, "These are the words reminiscent of the Cold War period, when the principle of `an eye for an eye' was in effect." He says "We had no idea there would be any publication in the U-S media about someone supposedly working for the Russian side." Earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov tried to play down the significance of the incident. /// IVANOV ACT - IN RUSSIAN - FADE UNDER /// He says, "We are hopeful this incident will not affect the development of bilateral ties, although of course, such episodes do not promote the improvement in the climate of our relationship." Observers in Moscow say this may be only the second incident of a U-S diplomat being charged with espionage since the end of the Cold War. One Russian analyst linked the episode to the surge of anti- American sentiment that has risen in the wake of events such as NATO's eastward expansion, the Kosovo crisis, and the fierce Western criticism of Russia's current military campaign in Chechnya. (Signed) NEB/PFH/JWH/JP 30-Nov-1999 11:00 AM EDT (30-Nov-1999 1600 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .