Saturday, December 7

Suspects were trained in assassination and espionage


 

 

Sergei Skripal was poisoned by agents of the same shadowy but buccaneering Russian intelligence agency he served in and betrayed decades ago, British authorities have claimed.

Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, named as suspects in his attempted murder and of his daughter Yulia in Salisbury, are agents of the GRU, the Russian ministry of defence’s elite intelligence and special forces arm, Theresa May told the House of Commons on Wednesday.

There is barely any information available about the pair, but they are almost certainly commissioned Russian military officers highly trained in covert operations, espionage and assassination.

After releasing photographs of the two well-built men in their 40s, police said they were travelling under aliases.

Fontanka, an independent Russian news agency, reported that the men’s passports were issued in 2016 and that they travelled to Amsterdam, Geneva, Milan and went several times to Paris before their trip to Salisbury, but offered no confirmation for the claim.

The site also claimed a man called Ruslan Boshirov an unusual surname was born in Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, was registered at an address in Moscow, and was issued with two parking tickets in 2015.

On paper, the GRU, or Main Intelligence Directorate, combines two roles an intelligence branch, roughly the equivalent of Britain’s Defence Intelligence department, and the Spetsnaz brigades, the Russian version of the SAS and SBS.

But unlike the FSB and SVR, the domestic and overseas spy agencies that emerged from the break-up of the KGB, it has never been a civilian outfit.

The GRU essentially thinks of itself as a war-fighting agency, and it combines covert intelligence work with special forces mind-sets, said Mark Galleotti, an expert on Russian intelligence agencies.

That makes it more of a risk-taking organisation than its counterparts it is more important for them to take a chance than worry about the risks.

Recruitment to the agency is strictly via the armed forces, and those who get in are part of a hand-picked elite.

It is impossible to volunteer for the GRU, you can only be invited, said Boris Volodarsky, a long-serving former GRU officer.

The usual career route sees a promising commissioned officer recommended for selection by a superior.

They might then go on to serve as military attaches in foreign embassies, recruit spies to glean information from other countries’ military plans, or plan complex special operations.

Col Skripal was recruited into the agency after serving as a Soviet paratrooper officer in the Seventies and Eighties and was posted to the military attaches’ officers at embassies in Malta and Spain, according to British and Russian media reports.

But he betrayed the agency when he was recruited to be a British double agent in the Nineties – handing MI6 the names of dozens of key agents.

There is a slightly different career path for the Spetsnaz, which also come under the GRU umbrella.

Their work is elite war-fighting rather than intelligence, and soldiers go through gruelling training regimes similar to other special forces. They have been deeply involved in Russia’s semi-covert military campaigns in Syria and Ukraine.

It is not clear in which branch Petrov and Boshirov served. But Mr Volodarsky said it was the GRU intelligence branch, not the special forces commandos, who would be in charge of a delicate, non-battlefield assassination against a target like Col Skripal.

In any intelligence organisation there is a special directorate, one small department, that specialises in overseas special operations, he said.

The GRU is no different. There is a small department about maybe 20 officers who do this kind of thing.

The GRU’s headline-grabbing antics in recent years have gained it a special level of notoriety.

In July, US officials named and charged 12 GRU officers with hacking into Democrat computers in a bid to sabotage the 2016 US presidential election. Its agents were also accused of a failed attempt to mount a coup in Montenegro in 2016.

More conventionally for a military agency, it has been deeply embroiled in Russia’s semi-covert wars in Ukraine and Syria.

Mr Volodarsky said he was willing to believe that a Russian agency had used a nerve agent on Col Skripal, but said the official British account of the attack including flying two agents in on Russian passports was too crude to be believed.

This is total bulls t. Who would run an operation like that? No one, he said. It would take months of planning and quite a few people would be involved. Russian military intelligence goes back 100 or 200 years. They know what they are doing.