US-Russia ties will improve, hopes Moscow security official

Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev (L) looks at President Vladimir Putin during a meeting with the BRICS countries' senior officials in charge of security matters at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia
Russian Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev (L) looks at President Vladimir Putin during a meeting with the BRICS countries' senior officials in charge of security matters at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia
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Reuters, Moscow :
A further worsening of relations between Moscow and the United States is in the interests of neither side, Nikolai Patrushev, the Secretary of Russia’s Security Council, was quoted as saying on Tuesday.
“As recent history shows, relations between Russia and the USA will sooner or later return to a normal level, all the more so since it is in the interests of neither Moscow nor Washington to have a further degradation (of relations),” Russia’s RIA news agency quoted Patrushev as saying.
Meanwhile,
The head of British intelligence agency MI5, Andrew Parker, on Monday warned of Russia acting in “increasingly aggressive ways” and utilising new technologies in its opposition to the west.
“It is using its whole range of state organs and powers to push its foreign policy abroad in increasingly aggressive ways-involving propaganda, espionage, subversion and cyber-attacks.
“Russia is at work across Europe and in the UK today. It is MI5’s job to get in the way of that,” Parker told the Guardian newspaper.
The director general of the UK’s domestic security service was speaking after British warships earlier this month shadowed a Russian aircraft carrier battle group through the North Sea, which was en route to the eastern Mediterranean.
Defence Minister Michael Fallon said the Russian naval deployment was “clearly designed to test” British and broader NATO capabilities.
Last month Britain scrambled fighter jets from an airbase in Scotland as two Russian bombers neared, but did not enter, UK airspace.
Parker said Russia was increasingly positioning itself against the west and making use of non-traditional methods to do so.
“Russia increasingly seems to define itself by opposition to the west and seems to act accordingly,” he said.
“You can see that on the ground with Russia’s activities in Ukraine and Syria.
“But there is high-volume activity out of sight with the cyber-threat. Russia has been a covert threat for decades. What’s different these days is that there are more and more methods available,” Parker added.
The spy chief’s comments follow the US earlier this month accusing Russia of trying to interfere in the upcoming presidential election by hacking US political institutions, charges the Kremlin has repeatedly dismissed.
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