Children of Russian Spies Apparently Didn’t Even Know That Their Parents Were Spies
Yesterday, Western governments announced that they had undergone a prisoner swap with Russia. From Russia’s side, 16 prisoners were freed, among them Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich. From the West, eight prisoners were released from prisons in the U.S., Norway, Germany, Poland and Slovenia.
Among those released were a family who had been operating under deep cover as Argentine citizens. The cover was so deep, in fact, that it turns out the kids didn’t even know they were spies for the Russian government. Even more incredibly, they didn’t know they were Russian, which forced President Vladimir Putin to greet them in their native Spanish.
Peskov said the children of Russian spies Dultsevs learned that they are Russians only yesterday when the plane left Ankara
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) August 2, 2024
The fact is that the Dultsevs used a cover, pretending to be Argentine citizens. In Slovenia, they were sentenced to prison terms for espionage.
Poor… pic.twitter.com/W8pKBiU58p
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