Germany is blocking tighter restrictions on Russian spy-diplomats across Europe.
The Czech Republic has proposed ending free movement for Russian diplomats and their families in the European Union’s Schengen zone amid a series of Kremlin-inspired attacks.
Warehouses containing aid destined for Ukraine, arms factories supplying Kyiv and railway infrastructure heading east have all been targeted by Russia’s mounting hybrid war on the Continent, it is claimed.
Moscow has often deployed its intelligence officers in Europe under the guise of diplomatic postings.
The EU’s free-travel area, which spans 29 countries, is “easing malign activities” across the bloc, Jan Lipasvsky, the Czech foreign minister, wrote in a recent letter to Josep Borrell, Brussels’ top foreign diplomat.
Mr Lipasvsky, backed by eight EU counterparts, urged Brussels to “restrict the movement of Russian diplomats and their family members to the territory of a state of their accreditation only”.
[…]
European diplomats who spoke to The Telegraph and diplomatic notes seen by this publication revealed that Germany is a key blockage to the proposed crackdown.
It prompted allegations that Berlin’s government is attempting to foster relations with Russia, despite promises to end its reliance on previously cheap Russian energy supplies.
“Germany has the approach of returning to business as usual with Russia and they think this is escalatory,” a diplomat said.
So the Czech government believes it is impossible to monitore 2000 Russian embassy staff in the entire EU? Some of them are children and a lot of them will not be actually spies.
Also keep in mind that the EU has spies in Russia as well and quite a lot of them will be embassy staff.
They aren’t claiming the children are spies but that the diplomats are.
Sorry, I wrote that wrong. It has to be 2000 with Russian embassy passports, which includes families and therefore children. Point is, that it should be entirly possible to monitor them.
Removed by mod
Certainly easier then monitoring all national borders in the entire Schengen area for Russian embassy staff.
The solution is to kick out Russian diplomatic staff. That makes monitoring them easier.
Monitoring them anywhere in the schengen is easier than monitoring them at specific and significantly smaller subset of anywhere (at the borders)?
That’s absurd and not smart statement.
That would be optimal. However if someone objects to solution of lesser intensity, then this optimal one is not likely to succeed, is it?
Yes! How do you know they are crossing a border in Schengen? There are not permanent border checkpoints and few border patrols. So you have to be lucky to catch them in a random patrol. So you either have to know their locations at all times, hence monitor them anywhere, or you need to reintroduce border checkpoints all across the Schengen Area, which means staffing thousands of km of borders and monitoring the rest of the borders for illegal crossings as well. Obviously that destroys the entire advantage of Schengen in the first place.
Germany expelled so many embassy staff that Russia shut down 4 out of 5 consulats. Italy also kicked out a bunch of diplomatic staff.
You know that when you find them on the other side of it. And being on the wrong side of the border is easier to prove than the fact they are going to commit terrorist act.
Which can happen. It also excludes them from the air travel, for example, so it makes their terrorism harder, which is our goal.
Others did as well. And then the fuckers can just freely come from some other country that did not, which is what this discussion is about.
Embassies are used to coordinate spies. The actual terrorists often have had contacts with the embassy spy staff, but they use other passports. So by monitoring the embassy staff, you are able to find the actual terrorist spies. So when you find a Russia diplomat in the wrong country, you start to follow them.
Yes, but russians have more ways to deal with spies that are frowned upon in open, democratic societies.
If you want to believe that…
The CIA operated a network of so called “black sites” in Europe , which were undeclared operations for torture and abduction of people. While not formally recognized, the countries like Germany must have know about them and aided in their operations or prevented legal repercussions for the people involved.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_black_sites
The only difference is in how discrete they are about their methods, but intelligence agencies are equally violent all around the world.
Thanks, good to be reminded.
But I disagree that all intelligence agencies are the same around the world (or at least how they use the legal system to punish dissent)
e.g. https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/15/europe/ksenia-karelina-russia-america-sentence-treason-intl/index.html
or
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naomi_Wu
or
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/journalist-ryanair-plane-diverted-by-belarus-jailed-8-years-state-media-2023-05-03/
If you have equivalent situations in western countries (besides Assange) where people were denied habeas corpus, please share
Thanks for this comment. I really didn’t think of this.