Ukraine war

You mean in addition to Navalny and the former Wagner head?

Twenty years of ruthlessness: how Russia has silenced Putin’s opponents​


From poisonings to shootings to falls from windows and now possibly plane crashes, Kremlin has been accused of numerous lethal attacks

Pjotr Sauer
Sun 27 Aug 2023 03.00 EDT

The form of the attacks has varied, from underwear daubed with the nerve agent novichok and polonium-laced tea to more straightforward assassinations by bullet, but throughout Vladimir Putin’s 23 -year rule, Kremlin critics, journalists and defected spies have met with similarly ruthless treatment for opposing the Russian president.
The fatal crash of a private jet carrying the Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin two months after he spearheaded a mutiny against Russia’s top army brass two months ago appeared to have added a new method to the Kremlin’s extensive assassination menu.

While the Kremlin on Friday insisted it was “a complete lie” that it had anything to do with the jet crash, Prigozhin’s longstanding feud with the military and the armed uprising he led in June would have given the Russian state ample motive for revenge.
His death, along with the deaths of other members of the mercenary group who were onboard, including Dmitry Utkin, described as its founder or co-founder, also follows a pattern of action by the Russian state against its critics, including journalists, human rights activists and former allies who fell out of line.
Below are some of the more prominent cases of documented killings or attempted killings.

Poisoning​

Alexander Litvinenko in hospital bed
View image in fullscreen
Alexander Litvinenko in his bed at University College hospital, London. Photograph: Getty
Russian intelligence officials have turned political poisonings into something of an art form. Soviet scientists are believed to have worked for decades to develop colourless and odourless poisons. According to an interview in 1954 with a KGB operative, the testing of poisons was carried out on living prisoners.

Whereas poisoning may seem like an archaic way to kill, observers have argued that it offers the advantage of being a discreet method of assassination. It can be carried out without immediate detection, allowing the perpetrator to flee the crime scene and offering the Kremlin plausible deniability.
The two poisonings most closely associated with Putin both occurred in the UK.
Russia’s dark methods first came to international attention during the case of Alexander Litvinenko, a Putin opponent who died of polonium-210 poisoning in London in 2006. Shortly before his death, Litvinenko told journalists the FSB security service was still operating poison laboratories dating from the Soviet era. A British inquiry later concluded that Russian agents had killed Litvinenko, probably with Putin’s approval.
More than a decade later, Sergei Skripal, a former Russian military intelligence officer who had become a double agent for the UK, survived a poisoning with a nerve agent called novichok in Salisbury. Novichok means “newcomer” and refers to a group of nerve agents developed by the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 80s to elude international restrictions on chemical weapons.

Shortly after the assassination attempt on Skripal, which later led to the death of another local resident, Dawn Sturgess, who inadvertently sprayed the novichok on her wrists, Putin labelled the double agent as a “traitor” and a “scumbag”. In a separate interview not much later, Putin said he could forgive everything except for “treachery.”
Moscow also enjoys a long history of going after members of the political opposition.
In August 2020, the opposition leader Alexei Navalny – now jailed – fell ill on a flight from Siberia to Moscow. Navalny was later flown to Germany for treatment, where doctors established that he had been poisoned with novichok.
Alexei Navalny with family in hospital
View image in fullscreen
Alexei Navalny with his family at Berlin’s Charite hospital in 2020, before his return to Russia. Photograph: Instagram account @navalny/AFP/Getty Images
An investigation by the website Bellingcat identified at least eight FSB operatives who were allegedly behind Navalny’s poisoning. One of the operatives allegedly involved later confessed to his role in the plot in a phone call with the opposition leader.
Russian security services have also seemingly poisoned less prominent Russians, including the writer Dmitry Bykov and Pyotr Verzilov, an unofficial spokesperson for the punk art collective Pussy Riot, who was evacuated to Germany for treatment shortly after falling ill.
There have been indications that Russia has continued the practice since Putin’s troops invaded Ukraine.
Most recently, an investigative report by the independent news outlet the Insider alleged that three Russian journalists known for their anti-Kremlin stances might have been poisoned in foreign countries, including Germany and Georgia.

Shootings​

Tributes to Anna Politkovskaya
View image in fullscreen
A woman places flowers in front of a portrait of the murdered Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya. Photograph: Pavel Golovkin/AP

While poison has emerged as the weapon of choice in Putin’s Russia, several Kremlin critics have also been shot dead over the years.
In 2006, Anna Politkovskaya, a Novaya Gazeta journalist who reported on human rights abuses, was killed outside her flat in Moscow after returning home from the supermarket. It was Putin’s 54th birthday, and Politkovskaya was 48. Five men and one former police officer were later convicted of the murder, but those close to Politkovskaya described them as mere hired guns, carrying out somebody else’s orders.
Arguably most brazen was the the assassination of Boris Nemtsov, a prominent opposition leader, in central Moscow in 2015. Nemtsov was shot four times in the back by an unknown assailant within view of the Kremlin.
A joint investigation by journalists from the Insider, the BBC and Bellingcat revealed that Nemtsov had been shadowed by FSB agents for almost a year before he was assassinated on a bridge.
While most political assassinations have occurred on Russian soil, Moscow has also been accused of shooting its opponents abroad.
Most notably, in the summer of 2019, Zelimkhan Khangoshvili, a Georgian citizen who fought against Russia during the second Chechen war in the early 2000s, was shot twice in the head at close range in Kleiner Tiergarten, a park in central Berlin.
A German judge jailed Vadim Krasikov, an alleged FSB agent, for life for what he called a “painstakingly planned” hit job, saying Russian security services had provided Krasikov with a false identity, fake passport and the resources to carry out the assassination.
Krasikov remains the only suspected FSB agent to have been caught and convicted abroad for a murder. Moscow has reportedly been trying to involve him in a prisoner exchange with the west.

Unexplained deaths​

There also have been reports of prominent Russian executives dying under mysterious circumstances including apparent suicides or falls from great heights.
In 2013, Boris Berezovsky was found apparently hanged in the bathroom of his Ascot home. Berezovsky was a former Kremlin insider turned vocal critic of Putin’s government who went into self-imposed exile in the UK in the early 2000s.
Police at Berezovsky’s home
View image in fullscreen
Thames Valley police at the home of Boris Berezovsky in Ascot in 2013. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

Investigations and public inquiries into the death have not conclusively established anything beyond the officially determined cause of suicide, but a German forensic scientist retained by members of the businessman’s family said his examination of autopsy photographs had led him to conclude that Berezovsky had not killed himself.
Many of Berezovsky’s associates have also died in mysterious circumstances, including Badri Patarkatsishvili, a Georgian oligarch and business partner, and Nikolai Glushkov and the Yukos oil founder Yuri Golubev, two associates who were found dead in London.
Another former Kremlin insider, Mikhail Lesin, who founded the English-language television network RT, formerly Russia Today, was discovered dead in a hotel room in Washington DC in 2015, where he had been invited to attend a fundraising dinner.
Once a power player in Putin’s rise to power, Lesin was surprisingly dismissed from his position in the Kremlin’s influential media apparatus. After a lengthy investigation, a US autopsy concluded he died as a result of “blunt force injuries” and not a heart attack, as the Russian state media had reported.
Kirill Stremousov
View image in fullscreen
Kirill Stremousov, the deputy head of the Russian-backed Kherson administration, is pictured in his office. Photograph: AFP/Getty
One mystery that will likely remain unsolved for ever is the death of Kirill Stremousov, the Russia-installed deputy governor of Kherson province in Ukraine, who according to Russian officials died in a car crash on the day that Ukrainian forces liberated the city of Kherson in the autumn of 2022.
Stremousov, one the most prominent proponents of Russian occupation who was known for his aggressive statements on social media, publicly suggested in one of his daily videos that Russia’s defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, a close friend of Putin’s, should shoot himself. His murky death was quickly attributed by some to Russian security services, which needed to get rid of an inconvenient loudmouth no longer useful to the authorities
No need for all that hot air and bullshit, just some simple evidence Putin killed these people?
 
You mean in addition to Navalny and the former Wagner head?

Twenty years of ruthlessness: how Russia has silenced Putin’s opponents​


From poisonings to shootings to falls from windows and now possibly plane crashes, Kremlin has been accused of numerous lethal attacks

Pjotr Sauer
Sun 27 Aug 2023 03.00 EDT

The form of the attacks has varied, from underwear daubed with the nerve agent novichok and polonium-laced tea to more straightforward assassinations by bullet, but throughout Vladimir Putin’s 23 -year rule, Kremlin critics, journalists and defected spies have met with similarly ruthless treatment for opposing the Russian president.
The fatal crash of a private jet carrying the Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin two months after he spearheaded a mutiny against Russia’s top army brass two months ago appeared to have added a new method to the Kremlin’s extensive assassination menu.

While the Kremlin on Friday insisted it was “a complete lie” that it had anything to do with the jet crash, Prigozhin’s longstanding feud with the military and the armed uprising he led in June would have given the Russian state ample motive for revenge.
His death, along with the deaths of other members of the mercenary group who were onboard, including Dmitry Utkin, described as its founder or co-founder, also follows a pattern of action by the Russian state against its critics, including journalists, human rights activists and former allies who fell out of line.
Below are some of the more prominent cases of documented killings or attempted killings.

Poisoning​

Alexander Litvinenko in hospital bed
View image in fullscreen
Alexander Litvinenko in his bed at University College hospital, London. Photograph: Getty
Russian intelligence officials have turned political poisonings into something of an art form. Soviet scientists are believed to have worked for decades to develop colourless and odourless poisons. According to an interview in 1954 with a KGB operative, the testing of poisons was carried out on living prisoners.

Whereas poisoning may seem like an archaic way to kill, observers have argued that it offers the advantage of being a discreet method of assassination. It can be carried out without immediate detection, allowing the perpetrator to flee the crime scene and offering the Kremlin plausible deniability.
The two poisonings most closely associated with Putin both occurred in the UK.
Russia’s dark methods first came to international attention during the case of Alexander Litvinenko, a Putin opponent who died of polonium-210 poisoning in London in 2006. Shortly before his death, Litvinenko told journalists the FSB security service was still operating poison laboratories dating from the Soviet era. A British inquiry later concluded that Russian agents had killed Litvinenko, probably with Putin’s approval.
More than a decade later, Sergei Skripal, a former Russian military intelligence officer who had become a double agent for the UK, survived a poisoning with a nerve agent called novichok in Salisbury. Novichok means “newcomer” and refers to a group of nerve agents developed by the Soviet Union in the 1970s and 80s to elude international restrictions on chemical weapons.

Shortly after the assassination attempt on Skripal, which later led to the death of another local resident, Dawn Sturgess, who inadvertently sprayed the novichok on her wrists, Putin labelled the double agent as a “traitor” and a “scumbag”. In a separate interview not much later, Putin said he could forgive everything except for “treachery.”
Moscow also enjoys a long history of going after members of the political opposition.
In August 2020, the opposition leader Alexei Navalny – now jailed – fell ill on a flight from Siberia to Moscow. Navalny was later flown to Germany for treatment, where doctors established that he had been poisoned with novichok.
Alexei Navalny with family in hospital
View image in fullscreen
Alexei Navalny with his family at Berlin’s Charite hospital in 2020, before his return to Russia. Photograph: Instagram account @navalny/AFP/Getty Images
An investigation by the website Bellingcat identified at least eight FSB operatives who were allegedly behind Navalny’s poisoning. One of the operatives allegedly involved later confessed to his role in the plot in a phone call with the opposition leader.
Russian security services have also seemingly poisoned less prominent Russians, including the writer Dmitry Bykov and Pyotr Verzilov, an unofficial spokesperson for the punk art collective Pussy Riot, who was evacuated to Germany for treatment shortly after falling ill.
There have been indications that Russia has continued the practice since Putin’s troops invaded Ukraine.
Most recently, an investigative report by the independent news outlet the Insider alleged that three Russian journalists known for their anti-Kremlin stances might have been poisoned in foreign countries, including Germany and Georgia.

Shootings​

Tributes to Anna Politkovskaya
View image in fullscreen
A woman places flowers in front of a portrait of the murdered Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya. Photograph: Pavel Golovkin/AP

While poison has emerged as the weapon of choice in Putin’s Russia, several Kremlin critics have also been shot dead over the years.
In 2006, Anna Politkovskaya, a Novaya Gazeta journalist who reported on human rights abuses, was killed outside her flat in Moscow after returning home from the supermarket. It was Putin’s 54th birthday, and Politkovskaya was 48. Five men and one former police officer were later convicted of the murder, but those close to Politkovskaya described them as mere hired guns, carrying out somebody else’s orders.
Arguably most brazen was the the assassination of Boris Nemtsov, a prominent opposition leader, in central Moscow in 2015. Nemtsov was shot four times in the back by an unknown assailant within view of the Kremlin.
A joint investigation by journalists from the Insider, the BBC and Bellingcat revealed that Nemtsov had been shadowed by FSB agents for almost a year before he was assassinated on a bridge.
While most political assassinations have occurred on Russian soil, Moscow has also been accused of shooting its opponents abroad.
Most notably, in the summer of 2019, Zelimkhan Khangoshvili, a Georgian citizen who fought against Russia during the second Chechen war in the early 2000s, was shot twice in the head at close range in Kleiner Tiergarten, a park in central Berlin.
A German judge jailed Vadim Krasikov, an alleged FSB agent, for life for what he called a “painstakingly planned” hit job, saying Russian security services had provided Krasikov with a false identity, fake passport and the resources to carry out the assassination.
Krasikov remains the only suspected FSB agent to have been caught and convicted abroad for a murder. Moscow has reportedly been trying to involve him in a prisoner exchange with the west.

Unexplained deaths​

There also have been reports of prominent Russian executives dying under mysterious circumstances including apparent suicides or falls from great heights.
In 2013, Boris Berezovsky was found apparently hanged in the bathroom of his Ascot home. Berezovsky was a former Kremlin insider turned vocal critic of Putin’s government who went into self-imposed exile in the UK in the early 2000s.
Police at Berezovsky’s home
View image in fullscreen
Thames Valley police at the home of Boris Berezovsky in Ascot in 2013. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

Investigations and public inquiries into the death have not conclusively established anything beyond the officially determined cause of suicide, but a German forensic scientist retained by members of the businessman’s family said his examination of autopsy photographs had led him to conclude that Berezovsky had not killed himself.
Many of Berezovsky’s associates have also died in mysterious circumstances, including Badri Patarkatsishvili, a Georgian oligarch and business partner, and Nikolai Glushkov and the Yukos oil founder Yuri Golubev, two associates who were found dead in London.
Another former Kremlin insider, Mikhail Lesin, who founded the English-language television network RT, formerly Russia Today, was discovered dead in a hotel room in Washington DC in 2015, where he had been invited to attend a fundraising dinner.
Once a power player in Putin’s rise to power, Lesin was surprisingly dismissed from his position in the Kremlin’s influential media apparatus. After a lengthy investigation, a US autopsy concluded he died as a result of “blunt force injuries” and not a heart attack, as the Russian state media had reported.
Kirill Stremousov
View image in fullscreen
Kirill Stremousov, the deputy head of the Russian-backed Kherson administration, is pictured in his office. Photograph: AFP/Getty
One mystery that will likely remain unsolved for ever is the death of Kirill Stremousov, the Russia-installed deputy governor of Kherson province in Ukraine, who according to Russian officials died in a car crash on the day that Ukrainian forces liberated the city of Kherson in the autumn of 2022.
Stremousov, one the most prominent proponents of Russian occupation who was known for his aggressive statements on social media, publicly suggested in one of his daily videos that Russia’s defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, a close friend of Putin’s, should shoot himself. His murky death was quickly attributed by some to Russian security services, which needed to get rid of an inconvenient loudmouth no longer useful to the authorities
I'm not sure about others, but Litvinenko definitely wasn't killed by neither Americans nor Russians. We both use Po-210 to assassinations as neutron emitters, by putting it in Beryllium jacket. Clean, effective, almost trackless (if you don't know what to search). Its usage as poison was a stupid and demonstrative act. Highly likely he was killed by the Brits just for show.
 
I'm not sure about others, but Litvinenko definitely wasn't killed by neither Americans nor Russians. We both use Po-210 to assassinations as neutron emitters, by putting it in Beryllium jacket. Clean, effective, almost trackless (if you don't know what to search). Its usage as poison was a stupid and demonstrative act. Highly likely he was killed by the Brits just for show.
What did it 'show'? Keep your head in the sand if that makes you more comfortable.
 
The Russian Federal Security Service has stopped Ukrainian special services from committing a terrorist act in the Zaporizhzhya Region using an analog of a NATO-classified chemical warfare agent "BZ", the Federal Security Service of Russia has said.

The seized preparations, according to the Russian security service, are used to create chemical weapons of mass destruction and were developed in the U.S., RIA "Novosti" reports.

The FSB reported the detention of three Ukrainian citizens.
They also write that the substance was in vials with the inscription "Biosporin" in Ukrainian.

The NATO-classified "BZ" chemical warfare agent was in service with the US and British armies and was used, in particular, by the Americans in Vietnam, Igor Nikulin, a former UN expert on the prohibition of chemical and bacteriological weapons, told RIA Novosti on Tuesday.

According to him, the US and Britain claimed the complete destruction of the stockpiles of the substance.

"However, you can't believe the Anglo-Saxons, none of the inspectors these "gentlemen" did not let anyone into their sites. As its analog can be any chemical similar in formula, which is used in industry, in particular, in the production of paints and varnishes," - said the expert.
Earlier, Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov, head of the Radiation, Chemical and Biological Defense (RCDBZ) troops of the Russian Armed Forces, told reporters that the United States declared the complete destruction of the stockpiles of the BZ poisonous substance in 1990, but retained its samples and the possibility of synthesizing its precursors. He recalled that the US and its allies had repeatedly used munitions with chemical formulations in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.

Chemical weapons are such a thing that production of destroyed stockpiles can be deployed almost instantly, even at civilian chemical plants, and they can produce as much as necessary.
It is not an atomic bomb, where it takes years to enrich uranium and then to distill it into plutonium for the same amount of time, constantly testing it on the way, so that the final product would explode at all.

And the fact that the nazis are willing to use it is serious....
 
The Russian Federal Security Service has stopped Ukrainian special services from committing a terrorist act in the Zaporizhzhya Region using an analog of a NATO-classified chemical warfare agent "BZ", the Federal Security Service of Russia has said.

The seized preparations, according to the Russian security service, are used to create chemical weapons of mass destruction and were developed in the U.S., RIA "Novosti" reports.

The FSB reported the detention of three Ukrainian citizens.
They also write that the substance was in vials with the inscription "Biosporin" in Ukrainian.

The NATO-classified "BZ" chemical warfare agent was in service with the US and British armies and was used, in particular, by the Americans in Vietnam, Igor Nikulin, a former UN expert on the prohibition of chemical and bacteriological weapons, told RIA Novosti on Tuesday.

According to him, the US and Britain claimed the complete destruction of the stockpiles of the substance.

"However, you can't believe the Anglo-Saxons, none of the inspectors these "gentlemen" did not let anyone into their sites. As its analog can be any chemical similar in formula, which is used in industry, in particular, in the production of paints and varnishes," - said the expert.
Earlier, Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov, head of the Radiation, Chemical and Biological Defense (RCDBZ) troops of the Russian Armed Forces, told reporters that the United States declared the complete destruction of the stockpiles of the BZ poisonous substance in 1990, but retained its samples and the possibility of synthesizing its precursors. He recalled that the US and its allies had repeatedly used munitions with chemical formulations in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria.

Chemical weapons are such a thing that production of destroyed stockpiles can be deployed almost instantly, even at civilian chemical plants, and they can produce as much as necessary.
It is not an atomic bomb, where it takes years to enrich uranium and then to distill it into plutonium for the same amount of time, constantly testing it on the way, so that the final product would explode at all.

And the fact that the nazis are willing to use it is serious....
Maybe the inscription "Biosporin" in Ukrainian was a mistranslation of "Neosporin"? :laughing0301: Or another drug, Buspirone is primarily used to treat generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). It is an FDA-approved medicine for managing anxiety disorders or the short-term relief of anxiety symptoms. Off-labeled buspirone is used for the augmentation of unipolar depression.

Really though, who in their right mind would take the Russians, masters of disinformation that they are, at their word?
 
If we talk about just and unjust wars, and in principle for the proletarian there is a difference who will rob him of his own capitalist or foreign, because in the second case it is pure colonial robbery, and complete disenfranchisement, and in the first at least some bourgeois democracy...
Therefore, many national liberation wars, including the Russian Civil War of 1918, and the struggle of countries against colonizers, the same war of Yugoslavia against NATO, are just.
The current war in Ukraine, despite the fact that it is being waged by reactionary classes on both sides, is just, as the struggle of bourgeois democracy against open fascism, such as the US war against Japan.
 
Pinning that on Biden is quite the stretch. It was Ukraine that wanted him silenced, in the US he was nobody.
As well as Navalny or Piontkovskaya were in Russia. Anyway, both Putin and Biden use political assassinations as a tool, but most of those are not very public. And no, Zelenskiy didn't care much about Lira either (he have pretty many his own problems at home). As far as I know, he killed him only because Biden personally asked him.
 
Maybe the inscription "Biosporin" in Ukrainian was a mistranslation of "Neosporin"? :laughing0301: Or another drug, Buspirone is primarily used to treat generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). It is an FDA-approved medicine for managing anxiety disorders or the short-term relief of anxiety symptoms. Off-labeled buspirone is used for the augmentation of unipolar depression.

Really though, who in their right mind would take the Russians, masters of disinformation that they are, at their word?
Actually, Biosporin is a Russian&Ukrainian medicine for normalization of intestinal microflora.
IMG_20240228_225258.jpg


IMG_20240228_225003.jpg
 
As well as Navalny or Piontkovskaya were in Russia. Anyway, both Putin and Biden use political assassinations as a tool, but most of those are not very public. And no, Zelenskiy didn't care much about Lira either (he have pretty many his own problems at home). As far as I know, he killed him only because Biden personally asked him.
As far as you know? What exactly do you know? As far as I know extra terrestrials killed Lira.
 
Maybe the inscription "Biosporin" in Ukrainian was a mistranslation of "Neosporin"? :laughing0301: Or another drug, Buspirone is primarily used to treat generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). It is an FDA-approved medicine for managing anxiety disorders or the short-term relief of anxiety symptoms. Off-labeled buspirone is used for the augmentation of unipolar depression.

Really though, who in their right mind would take the Russians, masters of disinformation that they are, at their word?
Probably the same ones who heard that cow Nuland admit the US had bio labs all over Ukraine.
 
Probably the same ones who heard that cow Nuland admit the US had bio labs all over Ukraine.
You mean the labs trying to stop the African swine fever epidemic that periodically affects the region? You can't believe everything either Russia or their agent, Tucker Carlson, claims.
 
You mean the labs trying to stop the African swine fever epidemic that periodically affects the region? You can't believe everything either Russia or their agent, Tucker Carlson, claims.
No the ones working on bio weapons to attack Russia, get real.
 
No the ones working on bio weapons to attack Russia, get real.
Do you really think the US would do weapons R&D in a country that is being threatened with invasion by Russia? All those secrets would be handed over to Russia after their invasion. Who would be that stupid? Of course there are plenty of people who still believe Russian disinformation so I guess that is the answer.
 

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