String of own goals by Russian spies exposes a strange sloppiness |
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The secretive, daring GRU seems to have lost its way in the age of internet search |
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search |
Novichok Signatures
Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks | ||
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String of own goals by Russian spies exposes a strange sloppiness | World news | ||
It must go down as one of the most embarrassing months ever for Russia’s military intelligence.
In the 30 days since Theresa May revealed the cover identities of the Salisbury poison suspects, the secretive GRU (now GU) has been publicly exposed by rival intelligence agencies and online sleuths, with an assist from Russia’s own president. Despite attempts to stonewall public inquiry, the GRU’s dissection has been clinical. The agency has always had a reputation for daring, bolstered by its affiliation with special forces commando units and agents who have seen live combat. But in dispatching agents to the Netherlands who could, just using Google, be easily exposed as graduates of an elite GRU academy, the agency appears reckless and absurdly sloppy. One of the suspected agents, tipped as a “human intelligence source” by Dutch investigators, had registered five vehicles at a north-western Moscow address better known as the Aquarium, the GRU finishing school for military attaches and elite spies. According to online listings, which are not official but are publicly available to anyone on Google, he drove a Honda Civic, then moved on to an Alfa Romeo. In case the address did not tip investigators off, he also listed the base number of the Military-Diplomatic Academy. That was the same school where Anatoliy Chepiga, the alleged true identity of the Russian suspect in the Salisbury poisoning, finished his education. Viktor Suvorov, a GRU agent who later defected to the west, described the academy as so secret that Soviet citizens could be jailed just for revealing its existence. The internet has now made it far harder to hide that evidence. But the GRU apparently thought that would not matter. Meanwhile, most of the alleged agents could be found online. One of the men, Aleksei Morenets, an alleged hacker, appeared to have set up a dating profile. Another played for an amateur Moscow football team “known as the security services team” a current player told the Moscow Times. “Almost everyone works for an intelligence agency.” The team rosters are publicly available. Russia has claimed that the investigations are fake and that researchers are in league with western intelligence. But most of the evidence to uncover the spies was already out there, and conveniently timestamped on social media. The saga began after May’s announcement last month, when Vladimir Putin ordered the two Salisbury suspects to appear on television. There, the two men fumbled through an awkward story about visiting Salisbury twice to see the cathedral, while an editor for state television suggested that they were gay. Homosexuality is largely treated as taboo in Russia and the government passed a law banning “gay propaganda” in 2013. It didn’t help. One of the two men was outed as a likely GRU colonel anyway, after online investigators dug up photographs from his military service and leaked passport records. Along the way, the researchers from Bellingcat and the Insider also recognised that the men were issued sequentially numbered passports by a special division, making it easier for anyone with access to a leaked database to identify them. And then came Thursday’s bombshell: four men outed by Dutch investigators for attempting to hack into the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (as well as Malaysia’s investigation into a downed jetliner). The alleged spies were caught carrying enough telephones to fill an electronics store. Moreover, like all meticulous Russians on a business trip, they held on to their taxi receipts from GRU headquarters. Russia will publicly deny the latest reports and revelations about the alleged GRU agents. It has no other alternative. But the exposure of several consecutive European operations should raise questions about whether Russian military intelligence is being intentionally provocative or has simply gone off the rails. |
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String of own goals by Russian spies exposes a strange sloppiness | ||
The secretive, daring GRU seems to have lost its way in the age of internet search |
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
Italy To Back Anti-Russia Sanctions If Moscow Proved Guilty In Skripal …UrduPoint News–14 hours ago
… involvement in the March 4 poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal in the UK city of Salisbury, … The RussianForeign Ministry has sent some 60 diplomatic notes to the UK … Russian citizenship, as well as proposing legal assistance and cooperation. … and London’s refusal to provide consular access to the poisoning victims.
The Sun
UK is trying to keep EU on a short leash despite Brexit – LavrovTremont Herald–Oct 17, 2018
UK is trying to keep EU on a short leash despite Brexit – Lavrov … After groundlessly blaming Russia of the chemical poisoning of former … his daughter Yulia in Salisbury in March, “the British persuaded not everybody, … Lavrov reiterated that Russia has addressed the UK on numerous occasions, offering cooperation in …
UK Aims to Gather Multiple Anti-Russia Voices, Mocks Legal System …Sputnik International–Oct 16, 2018
The Council of the European Union has adopted new sanctions to counter the use of chemical weapons. “The EU will now be able to impose sanctions on …
Russian Embassy Reveals Why Moscow Believes Bellingcat Linked …UrduPoint News–Oct 15, 2018
Moscow believes that the UK-based website Bellingcat is linked to … The embassy stressed that London’s allegations of Russia having had a role in the Salisbury poisoning … “Why has the United Kingdom refused to transfer any samples of the … lack of evidence, while London had been rejecting any offer for cooperation.
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Putin compares Khashoggi case to Skripal poisoning, asks why Russia condemned despite lack of proof — RT World News | ||
Russian President Vladimir Putin has contrasted the world’s response to the disappearance of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi with its response to the poisoning of ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal, citing lack of proof in both cases.
Speaking at the annual Valdai Discussion Club in Sochi, Putin said that despite a lack of evidence proving Russian involvement in the poisoning of Skripal and his daughter Yulia in March, punitive actions were immediately taken against Moscow. In contrast, he said, that did not happen with Riyadh following Khashoggi’s disappearance.
“There’s no proof in regards to Russia, but steps are taken. Here, people say that a murder happened in Istanbul, but no steps are taken. People need to figure out a single approach to these kinds of problems,” Putin said. |
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Novichok poisonings | The Guardian – Google Search | ||
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Novichok poisonings | The Guardian – Google Search | ||
Salisbury house prices fall by nearly 10% after novichok attackThe Guardian–Oct 15, 2018
House prices in Salisbury have dived by nearly a 10% since the novichok poisonings, according to analysis of Land Registry data. The average …
Consultants brought in to ‘rebrand’ Salisbury after novichok attackThe Guardian–Sep 28, 2018
A team of consultants has been brought in to try to “rebrand” Salisbury as it attempts to recover from the novichok poisonings. The consultants …
‘We got really lucky’: how novichok suspects’ identities were revealedThe Guardian–Sep 27, 2018
The odds of finding the Salisbury novichok poisoning suspects’ real … pioneering a series of open-source investigations, told the Guardian.
The Skripal Files by Mark Urban review – the Salisbury spy’s storyThe Guardian–Oct 17, 2018
… Skripal this March with a show-off kind of murder weapon: novichok. … Skripal woke up in Salisbury hospital, five weeks after his poisoning, …
Police question couple at centre of Salisbury poisoning scareThe Guardian–Sep 20, 2018
A major incident was declared and the pair were tested for exposure to novichok, but medics quickly established they had not been the victims …
How a college drop out became a champion of investigative journalismThe Guardian–Sep 30, 2018
… to exposing the identity of one of the novichok poisoning suspects … in connection with the poisoning of Sergei Skripal and his daughter …
Vladimir Putin calls Sergei Skripal a scumbag and a traitorThe Guardian–Oct 3, 2018
Speaking at an energy forum in Moscow, the Russian president accused the west of portraying Skripal, who was poisoned with novichok in …
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Novichok poisonings: what is the GRU and how does it operate? | World news | ||
Theresa May’s statement saying the UK believes the Russian military intelligence service was behind the Salisbury novichok poisoning shines a further unwelcome spotlight on the most secretive of all the country’s intelligence agencies.
A slow drip of information about operations by the Russian service, known as the GRU, in recent years – from hacking ahead of the US election to support for the Kremlin’s wars in Ukraine and Syria – has shown the wide reach of the agency. The intelligence wing of the Russian military was renamed the GU in 2010, but both inside and outside the country it is still more commonly known by its old name, the GRU. The agency, where Sergei Skripal, who was poisoned by the nerve agent novichok, used to work, performs traditional military intelligence tasks and foreign intelligence operations. For decades Soviet military intelligence kept up a parallel global network of agents and deep-cover “illegals” operating overseas with that run by the KGB. The most famous of the agents was Richard Sorge, who posed as a Nazi journalist in Japan in the 1930s and sent valuable intelligence to Moscow, including details of Adolf Hitler’s plans to attack the Soviet Union, which were ignored by Joseph Stalin. When the Soviet Union collapsed and the KGB’s foreign spying operations were shifted to a new network, the SVR, the GRU retained a separate status. Although the SVR and GRU often have overlapping interests they tend to work in competition, with separate “residencies” inside Russian foreign missions abroad. Sergei Tretyakov, who was a high-ranking officer in the SVR’s New York residency until he defected in 2000, explained in a book that there was no overlap between the work of the two agencies. There were two unmarked steel doors on the eighth floor of Russia’s UN mission in New York, said Tretyakov, one of which led to the SVR and one to the GRU. Neither agency had access to the office of the other. The head of the GRU reports to the defence minister and to Vladimir Putin, the Russian president. The GRU has been identified as the main culprit in hacking ahead of the 2016 US election. A recent indictment from the team of special investigator Robert Mueller named 12 apparent GRU officers over the alleged hacking and leaking of Democratic party emails. Like the US operation, the novichok poisoning fits an apparent pattern of GRU operations: ingenious and audacious, yet uncovered and publicised by the target countries. The open source investigative team Bellingcat recently claimed it had identified a GRU officer named Oleg Ivannikov as being partly responsible for the downing of Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 over eastern Ukraine in 2014. The officer had also, allegedly, operated under a pseudonym as the defence minister of the Kremlin-backed breakaway state of South Ossetia. Again, it was an operation that mixed impressive tradecraft with errors: among the clues to the man’s identity was a record of an online shopping delivery where he had given his address as GRU headquarters. |
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Inside Europe: Skripal and the Czech connection | Media Center | DW | ||
MEDIA CENTERA new twist has emerged in the attempted poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia. Czech Radio has reported that the two suspects, believed to be Russian military intelligence officers, were in the Czech Republic in October 2014, the same time that Skripal was allegedly briefing Czech intelligence on Russian spying activity. Rob Cameron reports from Prague.
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“Hanging Johnny” in BILLY BUDD (1962) – YouTube | ||
“Hanging Johnny” in BILLY BUDD (1962) |
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Лондон ответил отказом на запрос СКР по делу Скрипалей | ||
В четверг, 18 октября, стало известно, что Великобритания ответила отказом на запрос Следственного комитета России (СКР) о взаимной помощи в расследовании «дела Скрипалей».
Как уточнил министр иностранных дел РФ Сергей Лавров, долгое время Лондон вообще никак не реагировал на запрос, ответ пришел лишь «несколько дней назад». Причем свой отказ британские правоохранители обосновали «соображениями национальной безопасности».
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Реклама 00 «Несколько дней назад поступил ответ, в котором официально написано, что по соображениям национальной безопасности Великобритания не может предоставить нам помощь по данному конкретному уголовному делу, связанному с судьбой граждан Российской Федерации», – сказал Лавров в интервью французским СМИ – RT France, Paris Match и Figaro. |
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The Latest: Britain says Russia has 24 theories on poisoning – Washington Times | ||
The Latest: Britain says Russia has 24 theories on poisoning
MOSCOW (AP) – The Latest on the poisoning of a Russian ex-spy and his daughter (all times local):
12:00 a.m. Britain’s U.N. ambassador says Russia has come up with 24 theories on who bears responsibility for the poisoning of an ex-spy and his daughter in England, but the United Kingdom has only one – that it’s highly likely Russia was responsible. Karen Pierce told a U.N. Security Council meeting called by Russia on Thursday: “We believe that the U.K.’s actions stand up to any scrutiny. … We have nothing to hide, but I do fear that Russia might have something to fear.” ___ |
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
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Britain refused cooperation with Russia on Salisbury poisoning – Google Search | ||
Russia rejects claim on IDs of Salisbury suspectsAnadolu Agency–Oct 12, 2018
Yakovenko also said relations between the UK and Russia are “very low”, accusing the Britishgovernment of not cooperating with Russia in … Yakovenko also denied any Russian involvement in the Salisbury poisoning or …
Russia’s Putin calls poisoned ex-spy Skripal a ‘scumbag’ and ‘traitor’FRANCE 24–Oct 3, 2018
But he again denied any Russian involvement in the poisoning of Skripal, … and his daughter Yulia with Novichok in the English city of Salisbury in March. … Putin said Britain should go through proper channels to cooperate …
Sputnik International
Russian embassy: British government seeks Moscow’s isolation on …TASS–Sep 28, 2018
… “the British authorities have categorically refused to cooperate with Russia, … Toxicity of the poison used in Salisbury is also impossible to verify.” … incident through the media, while refusing to officially engage with Russia.
‘Amateurs’ – Ex MI6 Officer on Video Allegedly With Skripal Case …
Sputnik International–Sep 28, 2018 Third Salisbury attack suspect believed to have been identified by police
BreakingNews.ie–Sep 28, 2018 Widow of Poisoned Spy: UK Has Upped Response to Would-Be …Voice of America–Sep 19, 2018
Speaking with VOA’s Russian service, Marina Litvinenko, … As Britain launched a formal probe of the Salisbury chemical attack, which experts traced to a Soviet-era nerve toxin known as Novichok, Russia, she said, refused to discuss … And I think Russian intelligence emphasized [Alexander’s] cooperation …
UK is trying to keep EU on a short leash despite Brexit – LavrovRT–Oct 16, 2018
After groundlessly blaming Russia of the chemical poisoning of former … Yulia in Salisbury in March, “the British persuaded not everybody, … UK on numerous occasions, offering cooperation in the Skripal case on … A relative of Yulia Skripal, who wanted to visit her in the UK, has been denied a British visa.
Russian Novichok Suspects Shadowed Skripal In Prague, Report SaysRadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty–Oct 10, 2018
The two Russian men suspected by British intelligence of poisoning … the English city of Salisbury on March 4, the day the former Russian … The Russian Embassy in Prague declined to comment on whether … Russian spy “continued cooperating with some secret services” after he went West in the swap.
Did Salisbury poisoning suspects spied on Skripal in Czech Republic …
Business Standard–Oct 10, 2018 |
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