Russia’s top spy reveals topics of secret talks with CIA

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The Wagner mutiny served as a “pretext” for CIA Director William Burns to discuss the Ukraine conflict, Sergey Naryshkin believes

It was Ukraine, rather than the mutiny of Russian private military company Wagner, that was the main subject of talks between CIA Director William Burns and Sergey Naryshkin, the head of Russia’s foreign intelligence service SVR, the Moscow official told media on Wednesday.

The phone call between the two intelligence chiefs took place in late June and was first reported by Western media, including The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. The outlets said Burns wanted to assure his Russian counterpart that the US government had nothing to do with the then-ongoing mutiny by businessman Evgeny Prigozhin, the commander of the private military force.

The issue was indeed discussed, but Naryshkin believes that “it was, to a large degree, a pretext, because the main part of the conversation focused on the issue of Ukraine,” according to his interview with TASS. The call lasted for over an hour, he recalled.

“We considered, debated what we should do with Ukraine,” the Russian official said.

Contrary to some speculation in the press, the two didn’t discuss the CIA director’s visit to Kiev, which he’d made earlier in that month, the SVR chief added.

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William Burns testifies during a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington DC, April 14, 2021
CIA chief spoke to Moscow about Wagner revolt – WSJ

Naryshkin and Burns met in person in November 2022 in Ankara. The Russian spy chief also told TASS that he was open to further, similar contacts.

Burns, who is 67, is a career diplomat who held the office of the US Ambassador to Moscow in the 2000s and, later, several top-level positions in the State Department. US President Joe Biden reportedly relies on the man to convey important messages to Moscow privately.

The Prigozhin mutiny was aborted a day after it started. The businessman and founder of Wagner, whom Russian President Vladimir Putin denounced as a traitor, was allowed to go to Belarus with some of his forces, under a deal with Moscow mediated by Minsk. Wagner troops were offered the options of signing up for regular military service, retiring, or leaving Russia along with Prigozhin.


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