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10 the absurd story of a famous spy
Special agent. Special agent. A spy. They acted in the dark. The public should not know who they are. Perhaps because of this, the most famous spies often pretend: James Bond, jason bourne and Jack Ryan of tom clancy,

Occasionally, it will kick off, whether it is because of betrayal or just time. The following is the story of 10 spy, and their story has been made public.

In response to Trump's spy, Buzzfeed quickly released the entire leaked document after CNN 20171reported that the director of American intelligence informed President-elect Trump of the Russian accusation of being tainted. (public domain) CNN) 2017 65438+1October1reported that Buzzfeed quickly released the entire leaked document after the head of the US intelligence department informed President-elect Trump of the Russian allegations against him. There are unconfirmed claims in the document that Russia has assisted Trump, provided him with information about his opponents and provided him with sweetheart real estate transactions. These documents also claim that the Russian Federal Security Service has obscene materials that extort Trump's sexual activities when he visits Moscow.

At first, the statement in the report was attributed only to a former spy whom the United States had reason to trust. However, within a day, Reuters reported that the person who arranged these files was a former British intelligence officer named Christopher Steele.

According to the news agency, Steele was under surveillance under diplomatic protection. The British newspaper The Independent reported that he had worked in the British embassies in Moscow and Paris. Steele is the founder of orbis business intelligence, a private company in London. By June+10/October 12, 65438, he had fled his home and hid because the files were made public.

On March 6, 2007, Valerie plame Wilson, a former CIA agent, testified before the House Oversight and Reform Committee in Washington, D.C.. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images) Valerie plame is a secret agent of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)-although she seemed to be only a professional in Washington, D.C. before being exposed by Washington post in 2003.

Plame is a deep undercover in the field of counter-proliferation. She said "60 minutes" in 2007. She said that her job is to collect intelligence and recruit spies to ensure that bad actors do not acquire nuclear weapons. When the late journalist Robert Novak revealed that she was a CIA spy, it was all over; Subsequently, Richard L. Armitage, former US Deputy Secretary of State, said that he had inadvertently revealed Plum's identity to Novak.

No one was accused of revealing Plum's identity, although the Justice Department investigated whether Bush took Plum as revenge for her husband's opposition to the Iraq war. During the investigation, Lewis Libby, an administrative consultant and lawyer, was charged with perjury, false statement and obstruction of justice.

Libby was sentenced to 30 months in federal prison, which was later commuted by President Bush. Plame lives in New Mexico now. On June 20th, 2006, in the intensive care unit of University College Hospital London, UK, "KDSP" Alexander Litvinenko "KDSP" and "KDSP" Alexander Litvinenko. (Natasha Weitz/Getty)

Alexander Litvinenko, a former agent of Russian spy agency Federal Security Service (FSB), fled to Britain in 2000 after being arrested twice in Russia, because he and his colleagues accused FSB executives of ordering the murder of boris berezovsky. Berezovsky is a businessman who criticizes Russian President Vladimir Putin. Putin and litvinenko spent what he said to him in exile. June 2006 1 65438+1October1,seriously ill. The doctor found that he was poisoned by radioactive polonium -2 10 and put it in the tea of Millennium Hotel in London that day. According to the BBC, litvinenko died of radiation poisoning three weeks later. A British investigation accused two former Russian agents Andrei lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun of poisoning. These agents denied the allegations and Russia refused to extradite; According to the BBC, a survey on 20 16 in Britain found that litvinenko's poisoning was "probably" approved by Putin.

Ethel Rosenberg and Julius were separated from the jury by thick barbed wire when they left the American court after being convicted. Ethel Rosenberg is one of the most famous names related to secret activities, but it is not clear whether she is guilty of espionage. 195 1 year, Rosenberg and her husband Julius were convicted of treason and accused of sharing the secrets of the US atomic energy program with Russia. Both of them were executed on 1953. According to CBS, just on 20 16 12, Rosenberg's two sons also asked President Obama to excuse their late mother. According to Ethel Rosenberg's Biography of Atomic Archives, she was born in Ethel greengrass, new york in 19 15. She worked as a secretary until she married her husband Julius and gave birth to their son. The couple had been members of the United States until 1943, which was not good for them in the cold war atmosphere of their trial. It is reported that the couple's main witness is Ethel's younger brother David Greenglass, who was convicted of stealing nuclear weapons information from Los Alamos, New Mexico. According to CBS, the documents released on 20 15 show that greengrass did not implicate Ethel in the testimony of the grand jury at first; A few years later, greengrass will tell * * * that he lied about Ethel Rosenberg's participation in order to divert his doubts about his wife.

Virginia hall CIA agent Virginia hall special operations office received the cross medal for outstanding service from general Donovan on September 1945. (CIA, public domain) A female spy with wooden legs during World War II? It seems amazing and unbelievable, but Virginia Hall's story is very dramatic. According to the CIA biography about her, the CIA spy lost her left calf in a hunting accident when she was 27 years old. She nicknamed her prosthetic leg Cuthbert,

. The Baltimore native was told that she could not take part in diplomatic service because of her disability. Instead, she joined the French ambulance team at the beginning of World War II. Since then, she has volunteered to work for the British Special Operations Executive, and started organizing activities against the German occupiers in France. The Nazis called her "the most dangerous of all allied spies" and were determined to destroy her.

They'll never do it. After the war, Hall continued his covert operations in Europe before 195 1 joined the CIA. She worked there until the legal retirement age of 60.

Oleg Goldie Yevsky Oleg Goldie Yevsky was appointed by the Queen of England on June 5438+1October 65438+August 2007, and was congratulated by Baroness Thatcher. What's the spy story without a double agent? Oleg Goldie Yevsky joined the KGB on 196 1. But since 197 1, Goldie Yevsky has another boss: British intelligence agency MI6. According to the Smithsonian's data in 20 15, Goldie Yevsky's double life caught up with him in 1985. In an interview with Smithsonian magazine, Gordeyev said that he had received news from Moscow that he would go home from his job in London because I knew it was the death penalty.

He was found, but MI6 assured him that he was not hurt, so he returned to Moscow. He was drugged and accused of being a double agent, but he was not arrested; Gordy told Smithsonian magazine that the Soviets were waiting for him to contact Britain to arrest him. From then on, Goldie Yevsky's life began to look like a movie plot. The Englishman gave him an escape plan for the cover of a novel; The signal of his escape is to see an Englishman eating at a designated place and time. He went to the Finnish border, where three British agents met him and prepared a specially modified off-road vehicle for him so that the escaped spy could hide in the usual cab. Gordievsky now lives in Britain and has written several books about the KGB. On June 23rd, 2006, the KGB office building in Moscow, Russia. (Oleg kerimov/Getty Photo Agency)

Melissa Norwood almost got it. According to her obituary, as the secretary of the British Nonferrous Metals Research Association, she passed the metallurgical research information on developing atomic bombs to the Soviet Union. Her code name is Hora,

The KGB archivist Vasili Nikitich Mitrokhin revealed Norwood's identity in 1999, when she was an 87-year-old grandmother living in southeast London. She told the BBC at that time that, on the whole, she didn't agree to engage in espionage in her own country. Norwood said: "What I did was not to make money, but to prevent the failure of a new system, which paid a huge price and gave ordinary people affordable food and expenses, good education and medical services." . She was never prosecuted and died in 2005. 1955165438+1On October 8th, Kim philby, former first secretary of the British Embassy in Washington (19 12- 1988) held a press conference at her mother's home in Drayton Garden, London. (Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

He is one of the most notorious spies in KGB history. He is the son of a British explorer and a colonial official in the Middle East. He was recruited as a Soviet spy at Cambridge University. Philby said in 198 1 that his position in the upper class provided a cover for his work in MI6. He claimed that it was easy to send secret information to Russians, and he just made friends with an archivist who asked him to take the documents home. 195 1 year,

Philby left MI6 because he suspected that he was the mole. 1955 was acquitted and went to Beirut as a reporter to work as a spy for Russia again. He was once again suspected by British intelligence agencies. He fled to Russia on 1963. It is reported that 1988 died there, disappointed with Russian capitalism.

Harriet Tubman Harriet Tubman (Library of Congress) Harriet Tubman is famous for transporting hundreds of enslaved people to freedom on the subway. 1849, Tubman himself escaped from slavery. From 185 1 to 1860, she made 19 visits and rescued about 300 slaves.

But Tubman is also a spy. During the Civil War, she volunteered as a cook and nurse in Fort Monroe, Virginia. According to the Historical Society of Harriet Tubman, Tubman was able to hold a formal post in the federal army after liberation was declared in 1963. She is a scout and spy, accused of designing escape routes for slaves. In a famous raid, Tubman led 150 black soldiers to liberate 750 slaves in South Carolina.

What is shown here is robert hansen, the so-called place where Ellis fell; ; Under the footbridge of Wolftrap Creek in Vienna, Hansen put a highly confidential information packet for his Russian processor to extract. For 22 years, robert hansen sold American secrets to the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation. A report by the US Department of Justice called it "the worst intelligence disaster in American history".

Hansen is a special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). He started selling information 1979 three years after joining the bureau in 1999.

"Hansen usually