By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

News Junction

Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • World News
    World NewsShow More
    Ousted Bangladesh PM Hasina’s party barred from election as party registration suspended
    Ousted Bangladesh PM Hasina’s party barred from election as party registration suspended
    May 14, 2025
    Cassandra Ventura testifies, tells jury freak offs became a job
    Cassandra Ventura testifies, tells jury freak offs became a job
    May 13, 2025
    White South Africans arrive in US after Trump administration granted them refugee status | World News
    White South Africans arrive in US after Trump administration granted them refugee status | World News
    May 13, 2025
    Trump’s Mideast Wish List: + Trillion in Investments – and Some Diplomacy Too
    Trump’s Mideast Wish List: $1+ Trillion in Investments – and Some Diplomacy Too
    May 13, 2025
    Djokovic-Murray coaching partnership ends before French Open | Tennis News
    Djokovic-Murray coaching partnership ends before French Open | Tennis News
    May 13, 2025
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Ukraine blows up bridges to consolidate its positions in Russia
    Ukraine blows up bridges to consolidate its positions in Russia
    August 18, 2024
    Commentary: AI phones from Google and Apple will erode trust in everything
    Commentary: AI phones from Google and Apple will erode trust in everything
    August 18, 2024
    The most famous Indian Dishes – Insights Success
    The most famous Indian Dishes – Insights Success
    August 18, 2024
    Life on the road as a female long rides cyclist
    Life on the road as a female long rides cyclist
    August 18, 2024
    UK inflation rises to 2.2%
    UK inflation rises to 2.2%
    August 18, 2024
  • Cryptocurrency
    CryptocurrencyShow More
    Cantor Equity Partners (CEP) News: 4,812 Bitcoin Purchased
    Cantor Equity Partners (CEP) News: 4,812 Bitcoin Purchased
    May 14, 2025
    BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, SOL, ADA, DOGE, PI, LEO, HBAR
    BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, SOL, ADA, DOGE, PI, LEO, HBAR
    May 14, 2025
    Altcoins’ roaring returns and falling USDT stablecoin dominance suggest ‘altseason’ is here
    Altcoins’ roaring returns and falling USDT stablecoin dominance suggest ‘altseason’ is here
    May 14, 2025
    How to Use tsUSDe on TON for Passive Dollar Yield in 2025
    How to Use tsUSDe on TON for Passive Dollar Yield in 2025
    May 13, 2025
    South Korea’s Democratic Party sets up ‘Digital Asset Committee’
    South Korea’s Democratic Party sets up ‘Digital Asset Committee’
    May 13, 2025
  • Technology
    TechnologyShow More
    How to Improve Your Spotify Recommendations
    How to Improve Your Spotify Recommendations
    August 18, 2024
    X says it’s closing operations in Brazil
    X says it’s closing operations in Brazil
    August 18, 2024
    Supermoon set to rise: Top tips for amateur photographers | Science & Tech News
    Supermoon set to rise: Top tips for amateur photographers | Science & Tech News
    August 18, 2024
    Scientists Want to See Videos of Your Cat for a New Study
    Scientists Want to See Videos of Your Cat for a New Study
    August 18, 2024
    OpenAI’s new voice mode let me talk with my phone, not to it
    OpenAI’s new voice mode let me talk with my phone, not to it
    August 18, 2024
  • Entertainment
  • Sports News
  • People
  • Trend
Reading: Accused Russian spy worked for U.K. intelligence, met with prime ministers and princes
Share
Font ResizerAa

News Junction

  • World News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Trend
  • Entertainment
Search
  • Recent Headlines in Entertainment, World News, and Cryptocurrency – NewsJunction
  • World News
  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports News
  • People
  • Trend
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
News Junction > Blog > World News > Accused Russian spy worked for U.K. intelligence, met with prime ministers and princes
Accused Russian spy worked for U.K. intelligence, met with prime ministers and princes
World News

Accused Russian spy worked for U.K. intelligence, met with prime ministers and princes

Published February 10, 2024
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

LONDON — In a semi-secret courtroom in an overheated basement, a three-judge tribunal this week heard testimony about an alleged Russian spy who may have burrowed deep into Britain’s top intelligence agencies, gaining access to secret documents and meeting with prime ministers and British royalty when they traveled to Afghanistan.

The British security services allege that the man, who may only be identified as “C2” and whose name is redacted in publicly available court documents, probably served as spy for Russia’s military intelligence agency, known as GRU. He arrived in the United Kingdom in 2000 as an Afghan refugee claiming asylum.

C2, who held multiple roles in the British government, is not charged criminally but is in court seeking to restore his British citizenship, which was revoked in 2019. A muscular-looking middle-aged man with a trim beard, dressed in a leather jacket and jeans, he did not speak with the handful of reporters who attended the sessions.

C2 denied to the court that he served as a Russian agent. Rather, he served Britain honorably, he said. It was dangerous work. He claimed he survived several assassination attempts.

C2’s lawyers allege that the U.K. security services provided only circumstantial evidence that C2 was a spy.

His lawyers said that C2 may have attended meetings with a pair of Russian military attachés named Boris and Dimitri in Kabul, as alleged by the government, but that these were just friendly get-togethers between men who liked to attend alcohol-fueled parties in Kabul and share pictures of rocket launchers and naked women.

Either way, Britain’s assertion that C2 may have been a Russian spy is embarrassing to the government and its intelligence services. Either he was a spy who worked at the heart of British intelligence, or they have misread the evidence and gotten the wrong mole.

The remarkable case is being heard by the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, known as SIAC, which is charged with handling secret evidence, or what it calls “closed material.”

Last year, SIAC heard an appeal from the British youth Shamima Begum, the “Jihadi bride” who went to Syria to marry a fighter from the Islamic State. After she was found in a refugee camp in Syria, Britain’s then-Home Secretary Sajid Javid stripped her of her British citizenship. SIAC dismissed her appeal.

In these cases, the judges have access to closed material denied not only to the public but even lawyers for C2.

The glimpses of C2’s life and times came from the guarded testimony heard in the “open” portions of the trial and court papers, from sources such as “FL” who worked for the agencies but was not especially forthcoming.

In C2’s case, the government security services assessed that he may have served as a Russian spy and that he posed a future risk to national security — and so they yanked his British citizenship. Still, C2 got out of Afghanistan on one of the Britain’s last evacuation flights before Kabul fell to the Taliban.

C2 is in court to win back his British citizenship and avoid possible deportation to Afghanistan or Russia.

C2 was born and raised in Afghanistan, where his father was a career military officer. The Times of London, which has been following the case closely, reported earlier this week that on his day of testimony, C2 said in court that MI5, the U.K.’s domestic counterintelligence and security agency, accused him of being groomed by the Russians from age 5.

In the 1990s, C2 said, he traveled to Moscow, crossing into Russia from Afghanistan with the aid of a smuggler. He lived in Moscow for six years, attended university there and married a Russian.

In 2000, with the aid of another smuggler, he said he was given a fake Russian passport and boarded a flight to a Caribbean vacation, with a stopover in London. At Heathrow Airport, he claimed asylum, saying he was fleeing the Taliban. He admitted he lied to authorities.

Regardless, C2 appears to have thrived in London. He worked as a translator, attended Brunel University and got an MA in intelligence and security studies.

While an alleged Russian asset, C2 rose through the ranks of British intelligence, working for the Government Communications Headquarters, the country’s intelligence, security and cyber agency, in London.

According to the government’s brief, C2 returned to Afghanistan, employed by the U.K.’s Foreign Office, as a cultural affairs adviser in a reconstruction team in the Helmand, Afghanistan.

In that post he met with then-Prince Charles, now king, and Prince William, former prime ministers David Cameron and Gordon Brown. He was featured in a U.K. Defense Department news release praising his work.

Court papers also showed C2 spent time in the employ of NATO in Kabul. He went on to serve as an official in the Afghan Ministry of Commerce. Later he was involved in oil deals.

His lawyer, Robert Palmer, told the judges that the Russians were key trading partners with Afghanistan; that his client spoke multiple languages, including Russian. He suggested C2 was a player in Kabul, a hard-working hustler at the shadow world of wartime Kabul, at the embassy parties and military bases, familiar with bribes and dealmaking — and that he might have suspected his Russian friends were GRU handlers “but he couldn’t know for sure.”

“Everybody in Afghanistan was fishing for information,” Palmer said.

In his closing arguments, Palmer said, in essence, that the fishing expeditions included one by the MI5, who hooked C2 up to an hours-long “alleged lie detector test” and then told him that he failed it. Perhaps strangely, one of the questions C2′s interrogators asked was whether he had ever met Donald Trump.

The lead judge in the case, Justice Robert Jay, told the courtroom it was possible for the tribunal to find C2 credible but he could still be considered a threat to national security.

Rory Dunlop, the lawyer who represented the government’s Home Secretary, said bluntly that C2 had given the court “misleading and implausible answers.” He said, “he has told multiple lies.”

#Accused #Russian #spy #worked #U.K #intelligence #met #prime #ministers #princes

TAGGED:accusedintelligenceMetMinistersPrimePrincesRussianspyU.Kworked
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article Lancaster Resources Announces Receipt of Interim Order for Crestfield Copper Spin-Off Lancaster Resources Announces Receipt of Interim Order for Crestfield Copper Spin-Off
Next Article Thiago injury ‘not good news’, says Liverpool boss Klopp Thiago injury ‘not good news’, says Liverpool boss Klopp
- Advertisement -

Latest Post

Cantor Equity Partners (CEP) News: 4,812 Bitcoin Purchased
Cantor Equity Partners (CEP) News: 4,812 Bitcoin Purchased
Cryptocurrency
BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, SOL, ADA, DOGE, PI, LEO, HBAR
BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, SOL, ADA, DOGE, PI, LEO, HBAR
Cryptocurrency
Ousted Bangladesh PM Hasina’s party barred from election as party registration suspended
Ousted Bangladesh PM Hasina’s party barred from election as party registration suspended
World News
Altcoins’ roaring returns and falling USDT stablecoin dominance suggest ‘altseason’ is here
Altcoins’ roaring returns and falling USDT stablecoin dominance suggest ‘altseason’ is here
Cryptocurrency
Cassandra Ventura testifies, tells jury freak offs became a job
Cassandra Ventura testifies, tells jury freak offs became a job
World News
How to Use tsUSDe on TON for Passive Dollar Yield in 2025
How to Use tsUSDe on TON for Passive Dollar Yield in 2025
Cryptocurrency
- Advertisement -

You Might Also Like

reports smaller-than-expected drop in CPI
World News

reports smaller-than-expected drop in CPI

August 9, 2023
Trump’s lies tested limits of the bully pulpit. His right to say them is at core of criminal defense
World News

Trump’s lies tested limits of the bully pulpit. His right to say them is at core of criminal defense

August 19, 2023
Islamic leaders in Malaysia urge cancellation of Ed Sheeran concert over singer’s pro-LGBT stance
World News

Islamic leaders in Malaysia urge cancellation of Ed Sheeran concert over singer’s pro-LGBT stance

February 2, 2024
Israel vows to hit Hezbollah after rocket kills 12 on football field
World News

Israel vows to hit Hezbollah after rocket kills 12 on football field

July 28, 2024

About Us

NEWS JUNCTION (NewsJunction.xyz) Your trusted destination for global news. Stay informed with our timely and accurate reporting on diverse topics, including politics, technology, science, entertainment, sports, and more. Count on us for unbiased and reliable updates at your fingertips.

Quick Link

  • About
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact

Top Categories

  • World News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Sports News
  • Trend
  • People

Subscribe

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

    © 2023 News Junction.
    • Blog
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    Welcome Back!

    Sign in to your account

    Username or Email Address
    Password

    Lost your password?