suddenly a huge fire occurred in a luxury home.
MOSCOW, March 31 (UPI) -- A Ukrainian
counterintelligence officer who attempted to infiltrate Russia's Federal
Security Bureau will be deported, the agency said Thursday.
The FSB noted in a statement that intelligence agencies, including
the United States' CIA, are working with the Ukrainian Security Forces
(SBU) in Kiev, Ukraine, and that the SBU's Lt. Col. Yuriy Ivanchenko,
called "a top-tier employee" of the SBU, was sent to Russia to become a false informant for the FSB.
Ivanchenko's plan, it said, was to supply an FSB employee with false
information, and then arrest him.
"At some point, the SBU and CIA had planned to seize the FSB officer
while obtaining information from Ivanchenko," the statement said, adding
that Ivanchenko was trained by the CIA.
Ivanchenko illegally entered Russia on a pretext of visiting relatives, and was arrested March 26 on suspicion of treason. Ukrainian law prohibits its special security forces from leaving Ukraine.
The FSB detained Ivanchenko before any intelligence was compromised,
it said. He will be deported to Ukraine and banned from entering Russia. SBU confirms arrest of its officer by Russia's secret services The
Security Service of Ukraine confirms the information of the Federal
Security Service about the detention of its officer in Russia.
SBU Head Vasyl Hrytsak told journalists reports.
"According to our information, he was arrested," he said.
India PM honours Brussels victims with wreath at metro station
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi has wrapped up
meetings in Brussels focused on restarting talks on a free trade deal
with the European Union. The meetings were somewhat overshadowed by
Italy calling for the release of an Italian marine who has been in
prison in India since 2012 for killing two Indian fishermen he believed
were pirates.
Katrina Pierson, the national spokesperson for Donald J. Trump's campaign, lashed out at CNN host Alisyn Camerota on Thursday for repeating three different positions the billionaire took on abortion within the span of three hours.
A day after Trump suggested that women deserved "punishment" for having illegal abortions, Pierson insisted to Camerota that Trump "never called for a ban on abortion."
"He said, 'I would ban it,'" Camerota pointed out. "You are mincing words here."
"This is a misspeak!" Pierson exclaimed. "There was a misspeak here, and you have a presidential candidate that clarified the record. Not once, but twice."
"But his clarifications were also confusing," the CNN host noted.
"No, they weren't confusing!" Pierson shouted before Camerota could finish her question. "But the clarification was that it would be a state issue. I'm not so sure what so hard to understand about that."
Camerota suggested that the off the cuff remarks were a "window" in to Trump's thinking process.
"It was a misspeak!" Pierson repeated. "How many times do I have to say that?"
"This was a complete misspeak during a conversation over a hypothetical concept," she continued. "And there was a clarification issue."
Pierson admitted that it was "fair" to ask candidates about abortion, adding, "But it should also be fair that when a candidate gives the response and clarifies that we shouldn't make this a 24-hour headline when we have things like terrorism going on in the world."
These people fell into the River because it was too confident.
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