Russian president Dmitry Medvedev today awarded Russia's highest state honours to a group of sleeper agents who were deported from the United States in a Cold War-style spy swap in July.
Kremlin spokeswoman Natalya Timakova said that the spies had been honoured along with other members of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service.
"A ceremony took place in the Kremlin today to give the highest state awards to members of the Foreign Intelligence Service, including spies working in the United States who returned to Russia in July," she said by telephone.
The Russian agents have kept a very low profile since they were exchanged in Vienna for four individuals who had been imprisoned in Russia for contacts with Western intelligence agencies, but Moscow has promised they would be looked after.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin met the spies soon after they returned and promised them a bright future in Russia.
The Kremlin honoured the agents despite widespread media reports that the spy ring failed to secure any major secrets.
Starting in the 1990s, from Virginia to Boston to Seattle, the agents attended elite Ivy League schools to meet future power brokers, obtained influential jobs, married, had children and bought homes in upscale areas.
Court documents released in the United States described how the Russian agents hobnobbed with academics and assembled data on high-end Manhattan real estate but did not accuse them of actually passing classified information to Moscow.
Anna Chapman, whose glamorous pictures posted on social networking web site Facebook made her a media sensation, is the only one of the 10 spies to have made public appearances.
She posed provocatively for a Russian magazine shoot in August and appeared at the launch of a Russian space craft earlier this month as part of her new job as adviser to a bank that helps finance the space industry.
Reuters