Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) on Friday announced the arrest of a Romanian citizen accused of conducting espionage activities on behalf of Ukrainian intelligence.
Ties between Moscow and Bucharest have come under increasing strain in recent months amid allegations that Russia interfered in Romania’s presidential election.
The FSB security agency said in a statement it had arrested a “Romanian citizen born in 2002 who was involved in intelligence activities on behalf of the Ukrainian special services”.
The agency alleged the suspect had “collected and transmitted information about the locations of air defence systems in the city of Sochi”.
State media published an FSB video showing a man being pushed to the ground and arrested by two FSB officers in camouflage.
In a filmed interrogation with his face blurred, the suspect, speaking English, said he had sent information about the location of a Russian air defence battery he had seen to a senior Ukrainian intelligence officer called Vladimir.
Both countries have expelled diplomats and military attaches in recent weeks, with Russia denying allegations of election interference.
Moscow was accused of being behind a massive social media push to get little-known EU and NATO critic Calin Georgescu elected president of Romania.
Romanian authorities threw out the results of the first round of last year’s presidential election after Georgescu topped the polls, boosted by a huge social media campaign promoting his candidacy. (AFP)
What you should know
The recent arrest of a Romanian national by Russia’s FSB signals a significant escalation in the already fraught relations between Moscow and Bucharest.
The 22-year-old suspect is accused of spying for Ukraine by collecting data on Russian air defence installations in Sochi — a move the FSB claims directly served Ukrainian intelligence.
His apprehension comes at a time when Romania and Russia are locked in a diplomatic spat, rooted in accusations that Moscow meddled in Romania’s 2024 presidential election. Romanian authorities had annulled the first round of voting after Calin Georgescu, a fringe candidate opposed to the EU and NATO, suddenly topped the polls following a flood of suspicious online support.
Both countries have since expelled diplomats, and the current arrest may prompt further retaliatory measures. While Russia frames the arrest as a national security victory, it also serves a wider purpose: reinforcing its narrative of Western and NATO-backed subversion.
For Romania, this incident will likely intensify efforts to secure its political processes and align even more firmly with Western allies.
The situation underscores how the Ukraine conflict continues to reverberate across borders, complicating regional stability and sparking new security concerns.
ALSO READ TOP STORIES FROM VERILY NEWS