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Putin: Russia's secret services don't kill traitors

The "swine" who exposed the 10 Russian sleeper spies in the United States will not be tracked down and killed, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Thursday, saying Russia has abandoned the Soviet-era practice of killing turncoats.
Vladimir Putin
Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, left, listens to a question during a call-in session broadcast live Thursday on Russian state television and radio in Moscow. Violent rampages outside the Kremlin have highlighted the need to strengthen public order and raise police prestige, Putin said. At right is TV show host Ernest Matskyavichus.Alexei Druzhinin / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

The "swine" who exposed the 10 Russian sleeper spies in the United States will not be tracked down and killed, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Thursday, saying Russia has abandoned the Soviet-era practice of killing turncoats.

"Russia's special services don't do that," he said during a televised call-in show. "As for the traitors, they will croak all by themselves. Whatever equivalent of 30 pieces of silver they get, it will get stuck in their throats."

The role played by a Russian intelligence officer in exposing the sleeper spies was first reported last month by the newspaper Kommersant. President Dmitry Medvedev confirmed the report, saying only that he had "found out about it on the day it happened."

Addressing the betrayal directly for the first time Thursday, Putin said the spies had been exposed by a fellow intelligence officer.

"Those people sacrificed their lives to serve the Motherland, and there happened to be an animal who betrayed them," Putin said. "How will he live with it all his life, how will he look his children in the eye? Swine!"

After the 10 agents returned home in early July following a spy swap, Putin met with them and led them in singing patriotic songs. Medvedev bestowed the highest state awards on them in a Kremlin ceremony in October.

Putin, a KGB veteran who led the main Russian spy agency before becoming president in 2000, insisted in a recent CNN interview that the agents had caused no damage to the United States.

Russian officials in the past have issued similar denials that the special services were engaged in killing turncoats.

Alexander Litvinenko, a former KGB officer turned Kremlin critic who died in London in 2006 after ingesting radioactive polonium, blamed Putin for the poisoning. Russia denied playing any role in the killing and refused Britain's demand to extradite the main suspect in the case, former KGB officer Andrei Lugovoi.

Russian security services also denied involvement when a former separatist president of Chechnya, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, was killed in a bomb explosion in Qatar in 2004, but two Russian intelligence agents were convicted in Qatar and later returned to Russia.