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Sleeper agent

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A sleeper agent is a spy or operative who is placed in a target country or organization, not to undertake an immediate mission, but instead to act as a potential asset on short notice if activated in the future. Even if not activated, the "sleeper agent" is still an asset and can still play an active role in sabotage, sedition, espionage, or possibly treason[a] by virtue of agreeing to act if activated. A team of sleeper agents may be referred to as a sleeper cell, possibly working with others in a clandestine cell system.[citation needed]

Description

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In espionage, a sleeper agent is one who has infiltrated the target country and has "gone to sleep", sometimes for many years. The agent makes no attempt to communicate with the sponsor or any existing agents or to obtain information beyond what is in public, and becomes active only upon receiving a pre-arranged signal or message from the sponsor or a fellow agent.

The agent acquires jobs and identities, ideally ones that will prove useful in the future, and attempts to blend into everyday life as a normal citizen. Counterespionage agencies in the target country cannot, in practice, closely watch all those who may possibly have been recruited some time before.

In a sense, the best sleeper agents are those who do not need to be paid by the sponsor, as they are able to earn enough money to finance themselves, averting any possibly traceable payments from abroad. In such cases, the sleeper agent may be successful enough to become what is sometimes termed an "agent of influence".

Sleeper agents who have been discovered have often been natives of the target country who moved elsewhere in early life and were co-opted (perhaps for ideological or ethnic reasons) before returning to the target country. That is valuable to the sponsor, as the sleeper's language and other skills can be those of a native, thus less likely to trigger domestic suspicion.

Choosing and inserting sleeper agents has often been difficult, as whether the target will be appropriate some years in the future is uncertain. If the sponsor government and its policies change after the sleeper has been inserted, the sleeper may be found to have been planted in the wrong target.

Examples

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  • Jack Barsky was planted as a sleeper agent in the United States by the Soviet KGB. He was an active sleeper agent between 1978 and 1988. He was located by US authorities in 1994 and then arrested in 1997. Barsky quickly confessed after being arrested and became a useful source of information about spy techniques.[1]
  • The Illegals Program is a network of sleeper spies planted in the US by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service. An ongoing, multiyear investigation culminated in June 2010 with the filing of charges and the arrest of 10 suspects in the US and another in Cyprus. The Russian General Directorate for special programs, or GUSP in Russian transliteration (Главное управление специальных программ, ГУСП), still recruits candidates among students and talented scientists to use them as sleeper agents or as legal employees in police and intelligence bodies in Russia.

Fictional examples

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Sleeper agents are popular plot devices in fiction, particularly in espionage fiction and science fiction. This common use is directly related to and results from repeated instances of real-life "sleeper agents" participating in spying, espionage, sedition, treason, and assassinations.

In fictional portrayals, sleeper agents are sometimes unaware that they are sleepers. They are brainwashed, hypnotized, or otherwise conditioned to be unaware of their secret mission until activated.

Books and films

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  • In The Manchurian Candidate (the novel and its film adaptations), some Americans are captured by Soviet intelligence forces, given posthypnotic commands, and returned to their lives in the U.S.
  • In the 1977 film Telefon, Russian agents believe they are ordinary Americans until their memories are unlocked with a special activation phrase.
  • The 1978 book Eye of the Needle by Ken Follett and 1981 film of the same name both show how a sleeper agent, Henry Faber (Donald Sutherland), operates in his target country.
  • In the 1987 film No Way Out, protagonist U.S. naval officer Tom Farrell, played by Kevin Costner, is revealed, in a twist at the end of the film, to be a Soviet spy under deep cover in the USA.
  • In the British comedy-drama Sleepers, two Russian agents have integrated so well into their lives as British citizens, that when receive their activation signal, they go on the run.
  • In the 2010 film Salt, a CIA officer goes on the run when accused of being a sleeper agent by a Russian defector.
  • The film Killers, also released in 2010, has an assassin trying to leave his life as a government operative behind by getting married and living a domestic life, but he is then followed by many killers, who are near the end revealed to be sleeper agents working for his father-in-law, himself a former assassin.
  • In the 2012 film Thuppakki and its 2014 remake Holiday: A Soldier Is Never Off Duty, the sleeper cells attack the city of Mumbai.
  • The 2013 film Viswaroopam has an unravelling plot where the sleeper agents are scraping caesium-137 from oncological equipment to build and trigger a dirty bomb in New York City. The main character, Wisam Ahmed Kashmiri, is also a sleeper agent against Al-Qaeda for RAW, posing as a Hindu Kathak teacher, Viswanathan in New York City.
  • In the 2015 film American Ultra, small-town stoner Mike Howell spends most of his time getting high and writing graphic novels. What Mike does not know is that he was trained by the CIA to be a lethal killing machine. When the agency targets him for termination, his former handler activates his latent skills, turning the mild-mannered slacker into a deadly weapon.
  • Gustaf Skördeman's 2020 book Geiger shows a sleeper agent being activated in Sweden during the Cold War.[2]
  • The 2021 film Black Widow involves Russian sleeper cells in the United States during the Cold War, raising and brainwashing adopted girls, eventually bringing them to Russia, where they are trained to be Black Widow operatives.

Television

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  • The first season of the 2011–2020 series Homeland involves a recovered hostage who is accused of being a terrorist sleeper agent.
  • The 2013–2018 television series The Americans features a pair of KGB agents posing as an average American family. It is set during the Cold War in the 1980s.
  • In a season one episode of the modern-day Sherlock Holmes adaptation, Elementary, a murder victim and her husband are unmasked as Russian sleeper agents by the main character.

Video games

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  • The main character of the 2010 video game Call of Duty: Black Ops is brainwashed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War, along with others to be sleeper agents and detonate a deadly gas across the US when activated.
  • In 2016 The Division was released where players take control of a Sleeper Agent looking to protect what remains when New York falls to the "Dollar Virus" sending to the city into a pandemic frenzy.
  • The main character of the 2020 video game Cyberpunk 2077, in the storyline of its Phantom Liberty expansion pack, activates sleeper agent Solomon Reed by using the deprecated land-line system in order to get help with extracting the president of the New United States of America.
  • In The Outlast Trials, players control a "Reagent". They must complete "Trials" within the Sinyala Facility in Arizona during the height of the Cold War to earn their freedom. The game's many endings imply the successful transformation of these individuals into sleeper agents; a result of the harsh conditioning experienced through the Trials.

Music

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  • Taylor Swift's 2024 song “The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived” includes a line “...were you a sleeper cell spy? In fifty years will all this be declassified?” as a hyperbolic metaphorical explanation for why a man left her abruptly without explanation.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ If the agent is enlisted against his or her own country.

References

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  1. ^ "Jack Barsky: The KGB spy who lived the American dream". February 23, 2017 – via www.bbc.com.
  2. ^ "Geiger". Goodreads. Retrieved 2024-04-25.