Woman, bird arrested for allegedly being spies
In the world’s most unsettled region, it’s easy to get jumpy and see spies around every corner. Or nesting in every tree. Or biting tourists.
Iranian news agencies say a 55-year-old American woman has been detained on espionage allegations after she was found with "spying equipment." Reportedly, that may include a microphone or some other electrical device hidden in her teeth.
The woman, the fourth U.S. citizen to be arrested in Iran in the past two years, was picked up by customs officials in the border town of Nordouz, northwest of Tehran.
But the arrest hasn’t ruffled as many online feathers as the cloak-and-dagger apprehension by Saudi Arabia security agents claiming to have brought down a high-flying spy, code-named R65.
The officials are accusing Israel of sending a specially trained vulture into their airspace near the city of Hayel. The feathered operative apparently made locals nervous by looking down on them last week. When captured, the bird was found with a GPS transmitter and tag with the number R65 from Tel Aviv University stamped on it. Suspecting a clever Zionist plot, officials locked the bird up. Researchers in Israel say the bird is just a normal vulture, and part of an innocent long-term study.
But it’s not the first accusation of suspected animal agents being sent off to do dirty work on foreign soil. When tourists near the coastal resort of Sharm el Sheikh were attacked by a shark late last year, one Egyptian official reportedly suggested the biting menace might be an Israeli-trained provocateur. And spy birds are nothing new to the world of spooks and watchers. In 1940, British covert operatives were involved in a battle of the skies, by training peregrine falcons to take down Nazi-trained homing pigeons.