Cold War skulduggery
2010-07-16
Czechs laughed when 10 bumbling Russian agents were rounded
up in the U.S. and sent home, but they might soon have reason
to cry if their own ex-Defense Minister Martin Barták is sent to
Washington as ambassador. Barták was never caught red-
handed in a proverbial bag-pickup from a defense contractor,
but his reputation in this respect is rivaled only by that of
Miroslav Kalousek. Barták's bad luck was to hold out his hand to
a U.S.-owned company, Steyr, that has since gotten serious
about tracing the money trail. It shouldn't be hard for the FBI to
sniff out Alseda and other interested parties. Who knows, maybe
the NSA has even been eavesdropping on Barták, just as it
reportedly did to the Kaczynski twins. With diplomatic immunity,
Amb. Barták would no longer need to fear getting arrested when
touching down at Dulles, but the U.S. could trump him by just
refusing to give him agrément. On the other hand, the U.S.
might find it quite useful to have Barták there, because of the
leverage it would have over him.
[Czech Republic National Security Agency Lech United States of
America spy espionage]
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