10.17.18
Новая версия в деле отравления Скрипалей: «Агенты ГРУ» Петров и Боширов могли быть курьерами олигарха из России https://t.co/fQQ9ZfTddO #salisburypoisoning #feedly
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 17, 2018
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M.N.: I came to believe that there is the great degree of probability that Sergey Skripal’s arrest and conviction were indeed staged, to provide him with an excellent legend for his penetration and influence activities in the West. All the materials that I saw so far are based on his own recollections and there are no independent eyewitnesses, reliable or not, to confirm these accounts.
The personality or rather ‘the Persona” picture that emerges of Sergei Skripal is the one of the classical Russian Jewish “AFERIST“, “THE CROOK“, the Jungian Trickster-Joker Archetype (the same like Trump’s). He is the true spiritual grandson of Admiral Canaris, minus the Grandy’s intellect.
“The irony is that, as Urban tells it, Skripal was “an unashamed Russian nationalist”, even as he lived out his twilight years in an MI6-purchased semi. He spent much of the day watching Perviy Kanal – Russia’s foremost state propaganda channel – and approved of the country’s land-grab in Crimea.”
Daughter Yulia with Sergei having a meal in a restaurant in Britain (2016?)
M.N.: These “arrestors”, who look very much like the actors, are very careful not to cause him pain, while he looks like he tries to convey the sensations of depression and suffering, but not the real feelings, it seems. The facial muscles are relatively relaxed, and not contracted or tense in emotional, affective grimaces.
The whole scene of his arrest, with the LV bag (“a spy with LV bag”) looks quite suspicious.
I think all this was staged to provide Skripal with the good “legend” for the deep penetration operation in the “Far West”, for which he, Poteyev, and the others in the “Far West” Group were specifically trained.
Sergei Skripal reveals how he survived Russia’s notorious prison camp https://t.co/5ABtnC2UyK via @MailOnline
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 16, 2018
How Sergei Skripal narrowly avoided execution and was given a new life https://t.co/eQApczmHhu via @MailOnline
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 16, 2018
«Росбалт»: ФСБ начала проверку из-за утечки личных данных Петрова и Боширова — Сноб https://t.co/gTvEgRtRqm
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 16, 2018
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Skripal (pictured right) with his mother (pictured centre) and father (pictured left) in Russia
Sergei with mother Yelena at a family gathering in 2004, months before he was arrested
M.N.: His father looks more Ukranian (-Jewish), and his mother more Jewish (-Ukranian).
“On July 4, the phone rang at SVR headquarters. On the line was Leon Panetta, director of the CIA in Washington, wanting to speak to his opposite number, SVR boss Mikhail Fradkov.
He’d got their people, Panetta informed Fradkov. He proposed an exchange. The Russian agreed. It was game on for a spy swap.
The tricky question for the CIA, though, was if they sent the Russian illegals back, who did they want in return?
Two days after Panetta’s call to Fradkov, a guard went into Skripal’s accommodation block in camp IK5. ‘Get all your stuff ready and be at the headquarters block in ten minutes,’ he ordered.
‘What’s happening?’ Skripal asked. ‘Maybe you’re going to another camp,’ the guard suggested. Skripal moved quickly, packing things away and distributing his food, clothes and goodies to his paratrooper friends — his prison ‘family’, as he called them.”
M.N.: Are there any witnesses who were in the prison or the camp with Skripal?
“The FSB caught him passing his intelligence to the infamous MI6 James Bond-style ‘spy rock’ – a fake stone packed with receiving equipment – in a Moscow park.
“Russian secret services exposed the rock in 2006, revealing how agents walked past it transmitting their data to the rock via a hidden hand held device.
One official said after his conviction: ‘His activities caused a significant blow to Russia’s external security.’
Russian loathing for Skripal is highlighted by claims from Russian secret services historian Nikolai Luzan that the double was responsible for disclosing to MI6 the names of around 300 GRU staff members and other ‘agents’ including those working abroad.
Some of these military intelligence assets were ‘secretly arrested’ and others ‘vanished’, said Luzan.
Luzan referred to him Skripal in a 2014 interview as ‘this bastard – I’m not scared to use this word’.
‘Just imagine what muck this man did to other people’ – due to his treachery.
There has been no official confirmation of the 300 figure from the GRU.”
M.N.: Is it not obvious that Skripal used the same type of comminications in Salisbury, and he staged them too, just changed the sides? And at the end of this phase of his operation, he exposed and “sold” his “communicators”: “Boshirov, Petrov, and Fedotov”.
Michael Novakhov
10.16.18
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
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Salisbury poison victim Sergei Skripal reveals how he survived Russia’s notorious prison camp | ||||
Snatched, hooded and handcuffed by heavies from the Russian security service, Sergei Skripal was bundled into a van and driven to Moscow’s dreaded Lefortovo Prison. Once booked in there, you entered a netherworld.
Since Tsarist days, its most noted prisoners had always been those accused of dissent, espionage and treason. Under Stalin, its cell blocks were a key part in the industrial process of torture, confession and liquidation. In 1996, the new thought police, the FSB, had taken charge of the prison. After his arrest late in 2004, Skripal — a retired colonel with a distinguished army record and a high-flying officer in the GRU, the military intelligence arm of the Russian military — was reduced to the status of a common prisoner, sharing a cell with two others.
Salisbury poison victim Sergei Skripal was a double agent and vital MI6 asset One of them, he told me when I interviewed him last year, was ‘a real Moscow bandit, who’d killed three policemen and was charged with terrorism rather than a simple crime’. His body was tattooed with Nazi themes. Share this articleShare But conditions were surprisingly reasonable for a prisoner on remand awaiting trial. There were three meals and a packet of cigarettes a day. Bed sheets were changed every week and he was even allowed visitors. Video playing bottom right …
Double agent Sergei Skripal arrested in Russia in video from 2004
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Skripal reveals in new book his arrest late in 2004 (pictured) and how he was reduced to the status of a common prisoner, sharing a cell with two others He counted 17 different interrogators during the almost two years he was in Lefortovo, all trying to get him to confess in return for a lighter sentence. Other prisoners were beaten but Skripal wasn’t.
he survived Russia’s notorious prison camp and Stalin’s torture cells before the dramatic ‘spy swap’ which finally saw him free And as for his last couple of trips abroad, well, if they’d actually spotted him talking to British spooks, why not confront him with the evidence?
British Police Community Support Officers stand on duty outside Skripal’s home in Salisbury It was claimed that Skripal had been paid a total of $100,000 (£70,000) by MI6 for his spying activities, though my calculations suggest the figure was more like $70,000 (£54,000).
Sergei Skrial and his daughter Yulia posing in a restaurant. They were poisoned with the nerve agent novichok Anyone looking for a prisoner to put the squeeze on would be mad to pick on a guy within a gang of paratroopers. And pretty soon, Skripal’s military experience, age, physical presence and rank of colonel made him leader of the pack.
Skripal when he was younger- he was a paratrooper in Russia’s elite airborne corps graduated to reconnaissance units His Moscow bank accounts had been emptied by the FSB (though the money MI6 had been paying him was safely secreted abroad), but Liudmila sold some family possessions to give him more spending power to bribe the guards. Skripal even managed to get new showers and toilets installed in his block.
Skripal (pictured right) with his mother (pictured centre) and father (pictured left) in Russia Elsewhere, however, wheels were turning in the espionage world. In New York, a glamorous red-headed Russian agent, Anna Chapman (she had kept the surname of a Briton she’d married but was estranged from), was settling down at a table in an internet cafe to send her report back to Moscow via a laptop belonging to Russian intelligence operatives who were sitting nearby.
Skripal married his home-town sweetheart Liudmila who would prove the firm foundation of his adult life Tasked to infiltrate a country’s ‘ruling circles’, they gravitated towards academia, think tanks and the financial world, hoping to ensnare top civil servants, CIA people and bankers.
Sergei with daughter Yulia pictured eating a meal together in Britain In a coordinated round-up in June 2010, teams of FBI agents poured into the illegals’ homes.
Sergei Skripal holding a pint at a pub in England. He has now apparently recovered from the poisoning and is in hiding At the camp office, he was told, without explanation, that he was going to Moscow and was bundled into a black FSB car.
Skripal suspects deny working for Russia’s military intelligence
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Progress: 0% 00:00 LIVE MinimizeExpandClose Skripal was on his way out of Russia if he wanted to. It was his choice
Skripal with daughter Yulia and family posing outside their home The FSB wanted a reciprocal admission from Skripal. And if they didn’t get it, there was a danger the whole deal might miscarry.
Sergei with mother Yelena at a family gathering in 2004, months before he was arrested They were then driven to the airport where a Russian government Tupolev airliner was running through its pre-flight checks. They took their seats, and there was palpable tension when, just as the doors were closing, Hoffman hurried aboard and went to the cabin’s forward section.
Daughter Yulia with Sergei having a meal in a restaurant in Britain Sitting there in his dark-grey prison clothes, Sergei Skripal worried about what was going to happen to his family. He knew that in previous defections, the KGB had kept families apart for years.
Sergei (left) posing on a bench with his cousin Natalia (centre) and brother Valery (right) who served as a paratrooper A helicopter flew the two of them low over the rolling English countryside to Fort Monkton, a specialist MI6 training camp on the Solent, to begin weeks of debriefing. First, though, they were ushered into a room which Skripal remembered was ‘full of very good clothes and shoes.
Sergei’s daughter Yulia (pictured left) with his late son Alexander (pictured right) died in St Petersburg in 2017 ‘After I spoke to them, I became calmer,’ he told me.
Sergei Skripal (left) with his uncle Yury Fyodorovich, his father Victor Fyodorovich, brother Valery, aunt Alla, and mother Yelena Yakovlevna who holds baby Mikhail, and cousin Natalia The Skripals seem to have been happy in the months after Liudmila joined him in Salisbury, late in 2010, but her health was failing. She’d developed uterine cancer while her husband was in the gulag and now it had re-emerged and spread. She died, aged 59, in 2012.
Sergei Skripal (centre) with family including his mother and father (pictured left) By the time I met him, Skripal was carrying a few more pounds than when he’d arrived in Britain and his hair had thinned, but it would have been a great mistake to underestimate his mental or, indeed, physical toughness.
Yulia Skripal appears for first time since assassination attack
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Progress: 0% 00:00 LIVE MinimizeExpandClose In this sense, he acted as a consultant about how the GRU might approach a problem or gave insights into its historical operations. |
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Were Skripal arrest and conviction staged? – Google Search | ||||
This is how Putin bullies and intimidates his enemiesWashington Post–Oct 6, 2018
Mr. Skripal was arrested by Russia in 2004, convicted of treason, … The two men appeared in a stagedinterview broadcast by Russia’s RT …
The Week In Russia: Spies, ‘Scumbags,’ And Senior Citizens
In-Depth–RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty–Oct 5, 2018 ABC News
EDITORIAL: Kremlin’s hired guns require our vigilanceTuscaloosa News–Oct 9, 2018
Skripal was arrested by Russia in 2004, convicted of treason, … The two men appeared in a stagedinterview broadcast by Russia’s RT …
Other voices: The Kremlin’s hired gunsTwinCities.com-Pioneer Press–Oct 9, 2018
Skripal was arrested by Russia in 2004, convicted of treason, … The two men appeared in a stagedinterview broadcast by Russia’s RT …
Third Russian Possibly Involved in Salisbury PoisoningVoice of America–Sep 28, 2018
‘Fake news’ … Skripal was a double agent for British intelligence in the 1990s. In December 2004, he was arrested by Russian authorities, tried, convicted of high treason and sentenced to 13 years in prison. He was included …
The Independent
The Kremlin’s hired guns: We can believe either US, Dutch and British …The Keene Sentinel–Oct 10, 2018
Skripal was arrested by Russia in 2004, convicted of treason, … The two men appeared in a stagedinterview broadcast by Russia’s RT …
Ukraine minister says Sergei Skripal suspect helped ex-leader flee in …The National–Oct 3, 2018
Mr Skripal was convicted in Russia of spying for the British and was … He is believed to have worked in Moscow since 2009, where he was given the fake … before European arrest warrants and Interpol red notices had been …
‘My circle of protection in the Gulag’: Salisbury poison victim Sergei …Daily Mail–Sep 30, 2018
After his arrest late in 2004, Skripal — a retired colonel with a …. He was now a convicted criminal and on his way to the Russian Gulag. … In reality he was an undercover FBI agent, and he gave her a fakepassport that could …
The Week In Russia: A Shockingly Normal Election, Novichok News …RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty–Sep 28, 2018
Aleksei Navalny walked out of jail after 30 days – and walked back in hours … Here are some of the key developments in Russia over the past …. convictions in cases he and supporters contend were fabricated to … of former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter in England in March.
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How Sergei Skripal narrowly avoided execution | ||||
The man who is thought to have been poisoned with an unknown substance in Salisbury is retired Russian military intelligence colonel Sergei Skripal. He was brought to Britain in a spy-swap after he was jailed in Russia for spying for MI6 The man fighting for his life in a Wiltshire hospital is a former Russian colonel who was dramatically exposed as having spied for the British in one of the biggest East-West scandals since the end of the Cold War.
Colonel Skripal was accused of spying for Britain and sentenced to 13 years in prison in 2006
Sergei Skripal is believed to have been living at this address on Christie Miller Road in Salisbury since he moved to the UK
After his release Col Skripal was given refuge in the UK following his exchange in the historic spy swap involving femme fatale Anna Chapman (pictured) The Russian security service (FSB) alleged that Col Skripal began to sell information in 1990’s right up until 1999 – when he left the special services. They say he was paid around $100,000 for his services into his secret account in Spain.
Archive footage shows former Russian spy being arrested
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He was jailed for passing on the identities of Russian secret agents in Europe to MI6 He was sentenced in 2006 and was later pardoned in 2010 when he was one of four prisoners Moscow swapped for spies in the US.
In Moscow at the time of his arrest he was mocked as ‘the spy with the Louis Vuitton bag’ after grainy pictures showed him at an airport on route on one meeting with his handlers
Following his release Col Skripal underwent a debriefing in London following his exchange in the historic spy swap involving femme fatale Anna Chapman Ms Chapman was arrested at a New York police department precinct when she turned in a fake passport an undercover FBI agent had given to her.
The Russian security service (FSB) allege that Col Skripal began to sell information in 1990’s right up until 1999 – when he left the special services. This image shows him being arrested The FSB caught him passing his intelligence to the infamous MI6 James Bond-style ‘spy rock’ – a fake stone packed with receiving equipment – in a Moscow park.
Skripal had been living at the address with his wife Liudmila until she died in recent years
Police at Skripal’s property today following the incident at a busy shopping centre in Salisbury State-run TV in Russia even compared him to the legendary Cold War agent Soviet double agent Oleg Penkovsky, who spied for Britain and the United States during the height of the Cold War.
Anna Chapman shows off her figure on a beach in Thailand amid the poisoning scandal embroiling the GRU spy she was swapped for
Chapman’s Instagram is currently boasting pictures of her relaxing and posing in Phuket Her latest manoeuvres including lazing on the Thai island’s tropical Rawai Beach.
Once married to a British former public schoolboy, the seductive spy is now a propagandist for the Kremlin
The glamour SVR spy has become a multi-millionaire with her business ventures including her own fashion line and TV presenter work Once married to a British former public schoolboy, the seductive spy is now a propagandist for the Kremlin.
Chapman, pictured taking a selfie on Instagram, has yet to comment specifically on the alleged poisoning of Skripal
Chapman stayed at Nai Harn Baan-Bua – a sumptuous jacuzzi villa complex where a minimum three night stay costs around £600 ‘Putin warned about what we have for a response.
The swap included Anna Chapman, who had worked several years in London including for Barclays Bank In another picture back home in Russia, Chapman – who still uses her British ex-husband’s surname – is seen at a gathering of Vladimir Putin’s youth army or YunArmia.
Anna Chapman (pictured) and nine other Russian secret agents were returned to Russia in exchange for four Western spies in a dramatic swap in 2010
The exchange, described as the biggest spy swap since the Cold War and which saw Sergei Skripal returned to the West, saw two aircraft parked next to each other in Vienna
USA and Russia spy swap took place in Vienna in 2010
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In 2016 she appeared to back then-candidate Donald Trump for the White House, suggesting the tycoon would warm icy relations between the Cold War superpowers
The former Russian spy, the daughter of a senior KGB agent, also gave birth to her first child in 2015, it was reported
Russian and US airplanes in Vienna for spy swap in 2010
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The other three spies handed over by Russia were Alexander Zaporozhsky (left), Igor Sutyagin (right) and Gennady Vasilenko
Gennady Vasilenko, the fourth of the spies handed over by Russia in the 2010 swap deal
The swap took place after US officials determined there was ‘no significant national security benefit’ in imprisoning the ten Russian agents
The Vienna exchange was carried out in July 2010, a month after then-President Barack Obama had been informed of the matter, it was reported They and Skripal four were allowed to go in the exchange after admitting crimes against the Russian state, a Russian official said. |
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Archive footage shows former Russian spy being arrested – Daily Mail – YouTube | ||||
Archive footage shows former Russian spy being arrested – Daily Mail |
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Замминистра обороны генерал-полковник Александр Фомин выступил перед участниками XV Международного дискуссионного клуба «Валдай» | ||||
Он дал оценку ситуации в области глобальной и региональной безопасности, проинформировал о приоритетах деятельности Вооруженных Сил России, подходах к развитию международного военного сотрудничества. |
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Hamburg-based Sept. 11 suicide pilots – Google Search | ||||
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Hamburg-based Sept. 11 suicide pilots – Google Search | ||||
Germany deports convicted 9/11 suspect home to MoroccoWCJB–Oct 15, 2018
BERLIN (AP) — A Moroccan man convicted of helping Mohamed Atta and the other Hamburg-based Sept. 11 suicide pilots as they plotted …
The Early Edition: October 16, 2018Just Security–4 hours ago
Mounir el Motassadeq – convicted of assisting Mohamed Atta and the other Hamburg-based Sept. 11 suicide pilots – was deported yesterday …
Blast, casualties reported near Kabul airport following return of Vice …The Japan Times–Jul 22, 2018
“The blast was probably caused by a suicide bomber,” said Interior … left the chartered plane from Turkey where he has lived since May 2017.
Stabbed Brazilian presidential candidate needs another ‘big’ operationThe Japan Times–Sep 10, 2018
Sep 11, 2018 … of helping Mohamed Atta and the other Hamburg-based Sept. 11 suicide pilots as they plotted attacks on New York and …
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mounir el motassadeq – Google Search | ||||
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mounir el motassadeq – Google Search | ||||
Mounir el–Motassadeq, convicted for role in 9/11 attacks, is a free man …Fox News–21 hours ago
Mounir el–Motassadeq, one of the only two people who has been tried and sentenced in connection to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks is a free …
Man convicted of helping 9/11 terrorists is all smiles after early release
New York Post–6 hours ago Germany deports convicted 9/11 accomplice Motassadeq to Morocco
International–Deutsche Welle–Oct 15, 2018 9/11 attack associate deported9news.com.au–14 hours ago
Mounir El Motassadeq was a member of a group of radical Islamists based in the northern German city of Hamburg who helped bring about the …
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In seismic break over Ukraine, Russian Orthodox Church cuts ties with Constantinople – ABC News | ||||
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