Igor Vyacheslavovich Sutyagin (Russian: И́горь Вячесла́вович Сутя́гин; born 17 January 1965) is a Russian arms control and nuclear weapons specialist. In 1998, he became the head of the subdivision for Military-Technical and Military-Economic Policy at the Institute for US and Canadian Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, where he worked before he was arrested for treason on accusations he had given information to a British company, although he had no access to classified documentation as a civilian researcher.[1] Sutyagin spent 11 years in prison on espionage charges and was released by Russia in 2010 in exchange for the release of a group of spies arrested in the United States.
As of 2018, Sutyagin is a Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in London.[2][3][4]
^The Chekist Takeover of the Russian State, Anderson, Julie (2006), International Journal of Intelligence and Counter-Intelligence, 19:2, 237 - 288.
^"The EU Non-Proliferation Consortium - The Network". www.nonproliferation.eu.
^Russian troops stick to a tried and tested script, 2 March 2014
^"Boris Johnson warns Russia over spy collapse". BBC News. 6 March 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
Igor Vyacheslavovich Sutyagin (Russian: И́горь Вячесла́вович Сутя́гин; born 17 January 1965) is a Russian arms control and nuclear weapons specialist...
Sullivan, John. "IgorSutyagin". The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 10, 2011. Retrieved July 11, 2010. "IgorSutyagin: A very different...
Russian scientist IgorSutyagin, who she suggested could actually be involved in espionage. She argued that although communications of Sutyagin with foreign...
Natan Sharansky Sergei Skripal Andrei Sinyavsky Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn IgorSutyagin Jean-Christian Tirat [fr], French journalist and supporter of compliance...
GRU military spy chief Igor Sergun dies". BBC. 5 January 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2022. But Russian military analyst IgorSutyagin ...told the BBC that...
protection system for tanks. He died of his fourth heart attack in 2004. IgorSutyagin – Russian arms control and nuclear weapons specialist convicted in 2004...
Nikolai Vasilyevich Sutyagin (Russian: Николай Васильевич Сутягин; 5 May 1923 – 12 November 1986) was a Soviet fighter pilot in the Second World War and...
Archived from the original on 19 July 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2015. IgorSutyagin (March 2015). "Briefing Paper: Russian Forces in Ukraine" (PDF). Royal...
According to a statement by Amnesty International, "as in the case of IgorSutyagin, his first trial ended in acquittal; the court concluded that the prosecution...
are: IgorSutyagin (sentenced to 15 years). Evgeny Afanasyev and Svyatoslav Bobyshev, (sentenced to 12 and a half and 12 years). Scientist Igor Reshetin...
Valentin Danilov – 14 years for espionage for China. Mikhail Shein. IgorSutyagin (2004) – 15 years for espionage for USA. Exchanged for Russian spies...
including murder of Anna Politkovskaya, scientists accused of espionage (IgorSutyagin etc.), and the Katyn massacre. Anna Stavitskaya was born in Moscow....
добиться сегодня реабилитации [Man has the right. The trial in the case of IgorSutyagin has resumed. Engineer Vadim Lashkin, who in the 70s wrote the letter...
the Russian liberal opposition and human rights movement. He defended IgorSutyagin and Valentin Danilov against charges of espionage put forth by the authorities...
used by Russia as a legal cover to absorb Belarus. On the other hand, IgorSutyagin, a Research Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence...
because the truth is horrible'". the Guardian. Retrieved 21 March 2015. Sutyagin, Igor (March 2015). "RUSI Briefing Paper: Russian Forces in Ukraine" (PDF)...
Победы в Москве"". parad75.mil.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-08-23. Sutyagin, Igor, and Justin Bronk. Russia’s New Ground Forces: Capabilities, Limitations...
Russian President Vladimir Putin in support of the Russian scientist IgorSutyagin, who was accused by the FSB (the successor agency to the KGB) of treason...