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1 of 10. Russian spy suspects are seen in this courtroom sketch during their appearance in Manhattan Federal Court in New York, July 8, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Christine Cornell

MOSCOW | Sat Jul 10, 2010 12:59pm EDT

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Two participants in Friday's Vienna spy swap contacted relatives and said they were well, while no details on the activities of the remaining 12 emerged, according to Moscow press reports on Saturday.

Anna Chapman, the glamorous redhead who achieved internet fame following her arrest in New York, and Igor Sutyagin, sentenced to 15 years in Russian prison in 2004, both called siblings after the exchange.

"Everything is OK, we have landed," Chapman told her sister by phone from Moscow's Domodedovo airport on Friday, a friend of the family told the Tvoi Den tabloid.

Sutyagin telephoned his brother from a hotel in a small town outside London to say he was evaluating his future.

The comments mark the first tentative steps of newly free participants in the only major U.S.-Russian spy trade since the end of the Cold War.

It remains unclear where many of the 14 will ultimately reside, since some, such as New York City journalist Vicky Pelaez who likely arrived in Moscow on Friday, have few ties to their new home.

Sutyagin told his brother Dmitry that any rumors regarding plans to apply for political asylum in Britain were untrue.

"He doesn't want to talk about his future so far and wants first to analyze the situation... If you hear from anybody that he intends to appeal for political asylum in Britain or return to Russia, you should know this is untrue," Dmitry Sutyagin told Interfax.

Igor Sutyagin was sentenced for passing information on Russian weapons systems to a British firm prosecutors said was a front for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Supporters saw him as a political prisoner.

Chapman, also known as Anya Kushchenko, ran a real estate business in New York prior to her arrest.

She also lived in Britain for several years after marrying an Englishman in 2002, and her lawyer indicated she may seek to return there, according to reports in the British press.

Chapman is now divorced.

(Reporting by Alfred Kueppers)

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Comments (4)
melpol wrote:
Every individual and nation has many secrets, that is why there are millions of spies. The lowest type of spy is the Peeping Tom who starts out life looking through the keyhole of his parents bedroom. Many of them evolve into the highest level of spying which is the spy who discloses military secrets to the enemy.

Jul 10, 2010 1:25pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
STORYBURNpal wrote:
Tom Clancy would love this story

Jul 10, 2010 7:18pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
marisa70394 wrote:
I’m pretty happy that none of them got jail time since they were “just doing their jobs”. I suppose the one who should really be in jail is Putin for OK’ing this kind of espionage. He and his communist ilk are old vestiges of the Cold War, and the new Russia needs to get rid of them. After so many political failures in Russia, it’s time for Russia to move forward faster on economic reforms. Russia also needs to be better friends with Europe and the US – let’s stop these silly spy games and work together to put a stop to terrorism and put an end to corrupt government regimes. Russia would truly be a great country if they stood up to China’s CCP and called them out on their treatment of dissidents. It would also be great if Russia would quit selling weapons to the free-world’s enemies (long list). If Russia were to take the high road, their country would truly prosper. The world respects Russians greatly for their music, art, language, and culture, and this is what Russia needs to export more of, not their spies, unless, of course, they were sending a lot more lovely red-haired females, then, maybe, I wouldn’t be complaining so much.

Jul 10, 2010 7:46pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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