US soldier tried to leak info on Abrams tank to Russia: DOJ

A suspect was arrested Wednesday on charges of attempting to transmit classified U.S. national defense information to a foreign adversary. The suspect, Taylor Adam Lee of El Paso, Texas, allegedly sought to export sensitive information regarding the M1A2 Abrams main battle tank to Russia. The Abrams battle tank is a staple of American defense and is the primary American tank in use today.
Enemies ‘both foreign and domestic’
In a statement, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Texas Justin R. Simmons warned: “Our enemies, both foreign and domestic, should be aware that we diligently investigate and aggressively prosecute these cases.”
Taylor Adam Lee, 22, is an active-duty soldier serving in the U.S. Army with a top-secret security clearance.
A senior FBI official said that Lee attempted to give information on the Abrams tank’s vulnerabilities to Russia in exchange for Russian citizenship. Prosecutors say that he tried to offer his assistance to the Russian Federation in May, and that he promised to volunteer on behalf of Russia “in any way.”
While meeting with an individual he believed to be a representative of the Russian government, Lee repeatedly acknowledged that the information he was handing over was sensitive and was “likely classified,” according to Stars and Stripes.
Lee has not yet entered a plea to any of the charges pending against him, according to ABC News.
Alarming trends
Lee is the latest example of American soldiers, analysts or officials who have leaked classified information in recent years.
In April, former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Korbein Schultz, 25, of Wills Point, Texas, was sentenced to seven years in prison for deliberately selling U.S. military secrets to China and accepting bribes from an associate in China in exchange for sensitive non-public information. Schultz leaked at least 92 documents over a two-year period, according to CBS News.
In 2024, Massachusetts Air National Guardsman Jack Teixeira pleaded guilty to leaking classified information on the war in Ukraine to a Discord group chat, including information on Ukrainian troop movements and Ukrainian troops’ weapons supplies. Teixeira is currently serving out a 15-year sentence for those and related offenses.
Teixeira maintains that he had no intention of jeopardizing Ukraine’s defense and did not seek to transmit that information to Russian adversaries, in contrast to Lee’s case, where prosecutors say that Lee specifically sought out individuals he believed to represent the Russian Federation with the explicit intention of leaking information on U.S. military vulnerabilities.