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Politics

Spy scandal 'will die away,' Russian ambassador says

Russia's ambassador to Canada is playing down the case of a Canadian navy intelligence officer who was caught selling secrets to Russian agents, saying the spy scandal will have little lasting effect on relations between the two countries.

'With all due respect to Canada, its not the heart of our security concerns'

Sub.-Lt. Jeffrey Paul Delisle is escorted from provincial court in Halifax. Russia's ambassador to Canada says he doesn't think the spy scandal will have a major impact on Canada-Russia relations. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Whats a little espionage between friends?

Russias ambassador to Canada, Georgiy Mamedov, is playing down the case of a Canadian navy intelligence officer who was caught selling secrets to Russian agents.

Speaking to a business audience in Toronto on Friday, Mamedov described the case as a minor irritant rather than a full-blown diplomatic scandal. The ambassador predicted it would have little lasting effect on relations between the two countries.

"What you are talking about is very marginal, it will die away," Mamedov said during a question and answer session after his speech.

NavySub.-Lt. Jeffrey Delisle this week pleaded guilty to turning over classified information to Russia. Delisle worked at HMCS Trinity, the Navys intelligence centre in Halifax where he was privy to many secrets of Canada and its alliesthe U.S., Great Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

Between 2007 and 2011, Delisle was able to copy information onto a floppy disk and USB key and transmit it to Russian agents viadrafts in anemail account. Delisle, who was divorced and who had declared bankruptcy, was paid $3,000 a month for the information he provided.

Georgiy Mamedov, the Russian ambassador to Canada, says Canada is 'not the heart of our security concerns.' (The Embassy of the Russian Federation in Canada)

While the case has shaken the Canadian military, to Mamedov its hardly extraordinary.

"Even friends spy on each other", he said, adding quickly that Russia isnt all that interested in Canadian secrets.

"With all due respect to Canada, its not the heart of our security concerns."

Wesley Wark, a security expert at the Munk Centre for International Studies, says hes not surprised by the ambassadors response.

"That is the inevitable Russian response to this," Wark says.

"They have every reason to play it down. You know, dont let it trouble relations, dont think differently of us as a country."

While it may be in Russias interest to try to smooth over relations and wait for the spy scandal to blow over, Wark says Canadacannot afford to be quiet about the case. ToWark, the federal government has been far too diplomatic. The Russians, he says,need to know their actions are unacceptable.

"You dont protest naively with the notion that Russia is going to suddenly stop all its intelligence gathering. But you protest to send a message to say we, Canada, dont like this."

FourRussian diplomats were sent homefrom Canada earlier this year after the Delisle case came to light. The Kremlin, however, denied the diplomats had been expelled.

Since Delisle entered his guilty plea, the federal government has said little publicly about the case. Public Safety Minister Vic Toews did field a few questions on the subject on Thursday, saying that Canada was working with its allies to improve security systems around classified information.

"Certainly, we are very aware of the case and together with our allies are reviewing the procedures that were in place to protect the security of that information," Toews said.

"This is not a unique situation. Its happened with our allies. We have worked with our allies when that has occurred and we will continue to do so in the future to make our systems more and more impregnable.