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American Spies Who Paid The Price For Betraying Their Country

American Spies Who Paid The Price For Betraying Their Country

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Methodology

Asia Evtyshok / Shutterstock.com

Aldrich Ames

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Harold James Nicholson

Public Domain / FBI / Wikimedia Commons

Brian Patrick Regan

Public Domain / FBI.gov

Jerry Chun Shing Lee

Mark Wilson / Getty Images

Ji Chaoqun

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Jonathan and Diana Toebbe

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Kendall and Gwendolyn Myers

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Kevin Mallory

Spondylolithesis / Getty Images

Peter Rafael Debbins

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Methodology
Aldrich Ames
Alexander Fishenko
Harold James Nicholson
Brian Patrick Regan
Jerry Chun Shing Lee
Ji Chaoqun
Jonathan and Diana Toebbe
Kendall and Gwendolyn Myers
Kevin Mallory
Noshir Gowadia
Peter Rafael Debbins
Ron Rockwell Hansen

The world of espionage and spies have been a part of our world since ancient times, playing a vital part in the area of international affairs. The earliest known documents depicting the presence of spies were found in the Amarna Letters, a series of clay tablets from the 14th century BCE that mention espionage. Then there are the oldest recognized classified documents that are traced back to a spy working undercover as part of a diplomatic envoy to the court of King Hammurabi.

Espionage has been acknowledged as a vital part of military events and world affairs and is used by many organizations to garnish or protect information. While spies typically are successful in the execution of their covert operations, whether infiltrating governments, or criminal organizations, operating undetected, not all have that same level of accomplishment, and are eventually caught, prosecuted, and incarcerated (at the least).

Whatever their reasons, their crimes involved betraying the trust bestowed upon them by their own countries and engaging in activities that threatened state secrets, military operations, diplomatic relations, and sometimes the very lives of agents in the field. From high-profile espionage cases involving prominent double agents to lesser-known incidents involving operatives working in the shadows, these spies now face the consequences of their actions within the confines of prison walls. (These are the most infamous cases of betrayal in U.S. history.)

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