COVER BLOWN

Brit and US spies in danger after WikiLeaks publishes top-secret CIA spyware document

Latest Wikileaks release of classified docs comes as Julian Assange tweets 'I do not forgive or forget'

BRITAIN’S spooks could be exposed and endangered after WikiLeaks’ latest dump of top-secret CIA surveillance technology, experts warn.

The huge leak of classified material came as the anti-secrecy group yesterday celebrated Sweden's decision to drop a rape probe into founder Julian Assange.

Advertisement
: “It looks to me like a classic back door, which is extremely useful if you want to track an individual.

“If someone’s going through airport security, for example, a CIA agent would have the ability to put this on, track him around the world, have a back door and the computer calls home to us.

Advertisement

“The bigger concern for them, because this involves human intel, is that now that this has been leaked the people who might still have this on their computers will be able to find it, and they might be able to find out who the asset is working for the CIA.”

MOST READ IN NEWS

REICHMOVE
I’ve been forced to give away my £1.2m home because it was stolen by the NAZIS
DARK BETRAYAL
The affair that sent ‘Catwoman’ Jocelyn down tragic path of surgery obsession
NOT SO FUNNY
Moment BBC comic has airport meltdown snarling at cop & shouting 'I'm Titanic'
PEAK HELL
Rescuer reveals moment he found climber's mummified body 22yrs after vanishing

Assange, 45,  has been holed up inside London’s Ecuadorian embassy since 2012 in an attempt to avoid the probe – at a cost of £15million to the British taxpayer.

The Aussie has refused to quit the embassy despite the probe being dropped, raising the spectre of the £15million bill to police the area around the bolthole growing even further.

If he does leave the  embassy, one top extradition lawyer said the US will have a short "window of opportunity" to nab Assange if the Met chooses to arrest him for skipping bail and fleeing to the embassy five years ago.

Advertisement

Julian Knowles told The Sun: "The CPS could say: 'We’ll get him on Bail Act offence and he’ll likely get a couple of days in prison at most.'

"That would then give the US a short window of opportunity to file a provisional extradition request.

"But the UK cannot just hold him."


We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368

Advertisement

 

Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com