A FORMER KGB spy trained to seduce high-profile targets has warned how female agents use the same playbook to steal secrets from the West.

Aliia Roza, 41, was taught the art of seduction, influence and manipulation by authorities to target gangs and people traffickers on their behalf.

NINTCHDBPICT001039834528Spy-turned-influencer Aliia Roza now lives in Beverly Hills after leaving RussiaCredit: SUPPLIED NINTCHDBPICT001039834610She said she started training as a secret agent in Russia at the age of 18Credit: Supplied

Born to a high-ranking officer father and the granddaughter of a “national hero”, her dreams of working in fashion were quickly dismissed.

Instead, Aliia said at the age of 18 her dad shipped her off to a KGB military academy reserved only for the sons and daughters of top officials – the same programme that graduated from in 1975.

Out of 350 girls, she was one of four selected to be trained to manipulate powerful men through charm and psychology, turning emotional connection into information extraction.

Her tutoring also included specific lessons on learning sex techniques.

Aliia said: “When we were enrolled, we were told not to share these techniques with anyone – not even our colleagues or friends.

“Lots of it is about psychological techniques, the psychology of men – for example, what are their weaknesses? What are their needs? What are they scared of? What do they desire?

“When you learn the psychology of different personalities, you understand how to manipulate, how to make them do what you want.

“For example, agents, their main job is to recruit informers to bring you information or to do what to

“It’s subtle manipulation where they don’t know they’re being manipulated, they think it’s good for them and this is what they need when it’s all a set up.

“We were taught how to create that atmosphere around the target.”

After graduating, she joined the FSB – the KGB’s modern successor that Putin was formerly in charge of – and said she was tasked with infiltrating drug and human trafficking gangs.

Aliia said agents followed the same playbook to break down their target’s defences – without them suspecting a thing.

The spy-turned-influencer insisted these very tactics are being used by Russian and Chinese spies to prey on targets in Western countries – including the UK and US.

It comes as MI5 this week accused of carrying out espionage against Westminster politicians.

Both women – who pose as recruiters on – were named as part of a “widespread and targeted” campaign by the .

Aliia said: “Russia and China are the only two countries where they would use psychological relationship and manipulate people through this relationship, like love bombing, honeytrap…

“The standards of human rights are so high that they [Western countries] cannot do this.

“But in China and Russia, they use human connections because this is the easiest way and also the cheapest way.”

A woman in a flowing red gown, with a gun tucked into her dress, looks over her shoulder.Aliia now lives in Beverly Hills and is an empowerment coach for women NINTCHDBPICT001039834606She said she joined a military academy at the age of 18Credit: Supplied

Aliia claims that her main – and last – mission involved infiltrating a powerful drug gang by seducing its leader, whom she will only give the first name of – Vladimir.

When the information she gathered led to several busts, Aliia claims she was exposed as a secret agent by Vladimir’s cronies, taken out into the woods and beaten, leaving a scar above her right eye.

But she says that Vladimir saved her life by stopping his comrades from executing her – and paid for it with his own when he was murdered a few months later.

Following her lover’s warning that she should leave Russia, she says she first fled to Turkey before bouncing around Europe and ending up in Beverly Hills.

After escaping Russia with her young son, Aliia stayed silent about her background for almost two decades.

But now, despite receiving chilling threats of murder and kidnap, the ex-“sexpionage” trainee says she refuses to keep quiet any longer.

Aliia said: “I have received so many very bad messages, bad calls, telling me they would kidnap my son or kill me.

“When I moved to the US, if I hadn’t revealed my identity, my background, I would have been deported.

NINTCHDBPICT001039834612The mum-of-one is also a public speakerCredit: Supplied NINTCHDBPICT001039834647Aliia helps people spot manipulation – both in relationships and in businessCredit: Supplied

“My immigration lawyer advised me to go public and to speak openly about it.

“Secondly, I would like to bring awareness for people to understand how secret intelligence manipulation and tactics work.

“I share how to see and prevent manipulation, it helps people not only in romantic, personal relationships, but also in business.”

Now living in with her son, Aliia has built an glittering with appearances, famous faces and words of wisdom for her followers.

And she said she uses her knowledge to help others – both with spotting manipulation and helping women build their confidence.

The mum said: “I now coach women on how to be self-confident, how to spot manipulation, especially in relationships with men, because I’ve been manipulated.

“I was literally sex-trafficked myself by my commanders and my superiors, but at the time, I didn’t know that. I realised that after.

“All my students are like ‘it’s so cool, I also want to be an agent’ but the thing is, it’s a very dangerous job.

“And it’s a hidden job – people don’t know how many female agents actually died and sacrificed themselves for civilians to sleep peacefully at night.

“I try to bring awareness for people to understand this is not like a movie – it’s not like James Bond, romanticised character.”

China & Russia step up ruthless ‘SEX war’ on West

by , Foreign News Reporter

MOSCOW and Beijing are unleashing a new kind of warfare on the West – and it’s waged not with bullets, but with bedsheets.

US intelligence insiders say Russian and Chinese operatives are flooding America’s tech heartlands with a wave of seductive spies to steal state secrets and high-tech innovations through lust and lies.

Experts say this “sex war” is about more than secrets. It’s psychological warfare — exploiting human weakness to penetrate the West’s defences.

Jeff Stoff, a former US national security analyst, warns that America’s rivals are operating in plain sight: “The Chinese understand our system and they know how to work within it with virtual impunity.

“China is targeting our startups, our academic institutions, our innovators, our DoD-funded research projects.

“It’s all intertwined as part of China’s economic warfare strategy — and we’ve not even entered the battlefield.”

James Mulvenon, chief intelligence officer at Pamir Consulting, told The Times: “It’s the Wild West out there.”

He said he’s been bombarded with LinkedIn requests from “the same type of attractive young Chinese woman” – all to eager to connect.