Skripal was sentenced to 13 years in jail for spying for Britain in Russia in August 2006 after being convicted of “high treason in the form of espionage”.
Russian prosecutors said he had been paid $100,000 by MI6 for information, which he had been supplying since the 1990s when he was a serving officer. The FSB, Russia’s security agency, said the information passed to MI6 by Skripal constituted state secrets.
Skripal served in Russia’s GRU military intelligence until 1999, reaching the rank of colonel. He then worked at the Russian foreign ministry’s office in Moscow until 2003, when he went into business.
“You outplayed me,” Skripal reportedly told FSB agents after his arrest. An FSB spokesperson compared Skripal to Colonel Oleg Penkovsky, who was executed by the Soviet Union in 1963 for supplying the United States with information during the Cuban missile crisis.
In July 2010, the then Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, pardoned Skripal and the former colonel was one of four spies exchanged for 10 deep cover “sleeper” agents planted in the US by Moscow.
He and another Russian were flown to the UK after the exchange and were debriefed by MI5 and MI6 officers. At the time, Skripal was considered the more important of the two spies brought to Britain. It was assumed that Skripal had since been given a new identity, a home and a pension.
The two Russians who went to the US were Alexander Zaporozhsky, a KGB colonel whose information unmasked traitors inside the CIA and FBI, and Gennady Vasilenko, a former KGB officer.
Source: theguardian
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