CIA is reported to have sent dozens of Russian-speaking Cold War experts to keep track of Moscow's actions in Central America.
US officials fear Vladimir Putin could be spying on them using a James Bond villain-style lair right on their doorstep.
American agents have been tracking a flurry of activity on a Russian base on the edge of a volcano in Nicaragua.
GETTY IMAGES
US officials fear a secretive Russian base in Nicaragua is being used to spy on its nearby embassy
The secret jungle base is located on the edge of a volcano crater
GETTY IMAGES
The base is barely ten miles from the US Embassy in the country, pictured
And some fear the complex is Russia’s latest attempt to ruffle feathers in the Central American Cold War stomping ground.
One told The Washington Post: “Clearly there’s been a lot of activity, and it’s on the uptick now.”
Officially, the base – in Laguna de Nejapa – is a tracking site for Moscow’s GPS satellite system.But CIA heads are believed to fear the complex is being used to spy on the American embassy just ten miles away.
Such is the level of suspicion held by US spy chiefs, that The Times reports it has been sending Russian-speaking experts and Cold War experts to Central American in recent months.
Locals told the paper about rumours of a spy centre at the mysterious jungle compound.
One said: “They are Russian, and they speak Russian, and they carry around Russian apparatuses.”
Around 250 members of the Russian military are estimated to be present at the site.
Washington and Moscow have a long and bloody relationship over the troubled nation.
The US backed rebel group the Contras after dictator Anastazio Somoza was overthrown by left-wing Soviet-supported rebels the Sandanistas in 1979.
Tens of thousands were killed in the ensuing civil war.
The revelation comes as tensions between Russia and the US reach boiling point following Donald Trump's decision to bomb Moscow-backed Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.
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