SBU detains FSB agent in Kyiv: how he was adjusting Russian strikes on the capital.
The counterintelligence of the Security Service detained an IT specialist who was setting up 'video traps' to adjust strikes on Kyiv. In addition, the Russian agent was spying on the movement of convoys of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
The SBU has detained another FSB agent in Kyiv. The offender was adjusting missile-drone attacks by the Russian Federation on the capital and spying on the movement of convoys of the Armed Forces.
Following the instructions of the Russian special service, the hostile accomplice recorded the consequences of air attacks by the aggressor on Kyiv and monitored the locations of Ukrainian air defense systems.
A video camera was found at the scene, and a phone with evidence of his contacts with the FSB curator was seized.
The offender is in custody. He faces life imprisonment with confiscation of property. It should be noted that recently the SBU detained a Russian military intelligence (GRU) agent. The traitor turned out to be a mobilized fighter from the combat brigade of the State Special Transport Service of the Ministry of Defense.
The offender, who set up 'video traps' and spied on the movement of convoys of the Armed Forces, was detained in Kyiv. He faces life imprisonment with confiscation of property under the article of 'state treason committed in conditions of martial law'. The Ukrainian counterintelligence continues to actively expose and terminate the activities of hostile agents and spies.
Read also
- EU Commissioner Hails Ukraine’s Defense Industry as the World’s Best
- Nearly UAH 5 Million in Assets Seized from Former Kyiv Deputy Mayor Kuleba by Anti-Corruption Court
- Security Service and State Bureau Expose Ex-Official for Seizing a $3.6 Million State Hospital in Kyiv
- Kyiv Assassination Plot Thwarted: $100,000 Bounty Offered for Ukrainian Intelligence Officer Leads to Intermediary’s Arrest
- EU Membership Timelines for Ukraine and Moldova Hinge on Meeting Bloc Requirements
- Zelenskyy on Kryvyi Rih Strike: Current Pressure on Russia Falls Short

