Given the protests in Moscow and the deployment of riot police and security troops, I thought this was a good time to provide a quick update as to the security forces available in the capital, not least as a counter to some of the more fanciful suggestions about the imminent victory of people power. (more…)
All posts in category Security
Moscow’s Praetorians: the Kremlin’s security forces
Posted by Mark Galeotti on December 6, 2011
https://inmoscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2011/12/06/moscows-praetorians-the-kremlins-security-forces/
Russian cybercrime: means, motive and opportunity
The Russian hacker is an established trope of pop culture and news analysis alike and thus gets recycled ad nauseam, but it is based on fact, that they are disproportionately active in the world of cybercrime (and, indeed, cyberespionage). My latest Moscow News column, ‘Why are Russians excellent cybercriminals,’ briefly explores some of the reasons. In the future, I also want to look at the MVD’s Department K, its computer crime directorate, as well as the FSB’s Center for Information Security.
Posted by Mark Galeotti on November 22, 2011
https://inmoscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2011/11/22/russian-cybercrime-means-motive-and-opportunity/
Viktor Bout’s conviction: first thoughts
So, arms dealer and get-anything-anywhere shipper Viktor Bout was today found guilt on all four counts of his indictment, that is:
- conspiracy to kill US nationals;
- conspiracy to kill US government officers;
- conspiracy to acquire and use anti-aircraft missiles; and
- conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.
Of course Bout and his lawyers will appeal, and they are likely to have the continued support of the Russian government and ‘party of power.’ Voice of Russia has already flatly said that “The evidence against the businessman was quite ridiculous” and no doubt a chorus of similar disapproval will come from Russia, with the LDPR’s Leonid Slutsky dismissing the verdict as “a typical American propaganda ploy.” OK, he’s in the LDPR, but it is worth remembering that he is also first deputy chairman of the Duma’s Foreign Affairs Committee. Indeed, a collection of deputies in the Russian State Duma sent a letter to Presiding Judge of The Southern District of the Federal Court of New York Shira Scheindlin on October 7 inter alia stating that:
V. Bout’s case, according to his lawyers, is based mostly on non proven facts, speculation, dubious allegations, doubtful evidence and unpersuasive accusations, that have been proclaimed in the media for almost 10 years as the truth. Therefore, the formation of a negative international public opinion about V. Bout has started years before the provocative DEA operation [Relentless], which resulted in his arrest.
They claimed, needless to say, that Bout’s arrest was part of a shadowy plot to abort the ‘reset’ in Russo-American relations.
What is the big picture, though? I doubt it will have a major impact on US-Russian relations, even thought the ‘reset’ hasn’t really taken that much hold. Given that I suspect that Bout had a relationship with the GRU, military intelligence, I wonder if this will be another nail in the coffin of that organization, or at least dead-duck chief Shlyakhturov. If Bout was indeed a sometimes-agent or at least contact for the GRU, then it may also put a crimp in some of their operations.
But what about the global arms market, is that likely to feel the absence of Viktor? He’s certainly a character, but more than that was extremely good at what he did. I doubt his network can survive much more of an absence. There will, of course, be arms dealers – there always will. But they are unlikely to have the same range of connections, organizational capacities, attention to detail and ability to draw on Russian arms stocks as Viktor. So the capacities and efficiency of the global illegal arms market is degraded, if only slightly. But every little helps.
Posted by Mark Galeotti on November 2, 2011
https://inmoscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2011/11/02/viktor-bouts-conviction-first-thoughts/
On Military Police in the Moscow News
In this week’s column for the Moscow News, ‘Tough job for Russia’s new military police‘, I return to the vexed issues of crime in the ranks (still monstrously high) and the prospects for the new voennaya politsiya, something I’ve already written on here, although at that point without the benefit of Main Military Prosecutor Fridinskii’s splendid recent soundbite that “the scope of military corruption is mindboggling; it seems people have lost shame and a sense of proportion.” Nonetheless, the point does need to be reiterated that no police force – especially one drawn from an already-all-too-often-corrupted service – can ‘fix’ the problem. That needs to be a cultural process, a transformation of the Russian military that includes effective and law-based policing, but also extends to respect for all ranks, transparency of expenditures and a culture that holds senior officers to account. I think it’s a great step forward – but I’ll really start to believe in the VP when I see a senior officer in handcuffs, or them raid one of the underground factories producing counterfeit that you can still find sited on remote military bases to enjoy their “extraterritoriality” from regular law enforcement.
Posted by Mark Galeotti on November 1, 2011
https://inmoscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2011/11/01/on-military-police-in-the-moscow-news/
More on the GRU and its hard times
I return to the question of why the GRU is having a hard time of it at the moment (and is likely to continue to do so for a while) in my latest Moscow News column, Spooks Under Fire. They are suffering in part for being too obstreperous (and CoGS Makarov is looking to assert his authority) and also because Putin is becoming less tolerant of overlaps and turf wars within the intelligence community. Brian Whitmore makes some interesting additional observations in his latest Power Vertical blog post. We still await to hear whether military intelligence chief General Shlyakhturov will return to his post from his lengthy ‘medical leave’ – I suspect not.
Posted by Mark Galeotti on October 21, 2011
https://inmoscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2011/10/21/more-on-the-gru-and-its-hard-times/
The GRU: looking back at the view when Shlyakhturov was appointed
It does look likely that GRU chief Shlyakhturov is going to be dismissed in due course. When his predecessor, Korabelnikov, was sacked in April 2009, I wrote this brief for Oxford Analytica:
Oxford_Analytica_RUSSIA_GRU_chief_s_dismissal_opens_door_to_reform_tmp1F6D
(I should note that this article was originally published in The Oxford Analytica Daily Brief and is produced here with kind permission.)
Let me just note the three key issues I identified, in part to pat myself on the back, in part to look to the future:
- GRU’s Future: I suggested that the GRU would survive, but in less grand form, no longer a federal body in its own rights but more closely subordinated to the Chief of the General Staff. The formal redesignation of the GRU hasn’t happened yet (but I think it will) but it is certainly more under Makarov’s thumb. Next year it may simply become a regular rather than main directorate of the General Staff and be forced to move out of its recently-built HQ in Khodinka (not least because of the profit to be made from selling that tasty bit of real estate).
- Spetsnaz Reshuffle: the five surviving Spetsnaz brigades have indeed been transferred from military intelligence to regular territorial army commands.
- Shifting Priorities: I thought the GRU would concentrate on core military intel missions and this does seem to be happening, with the closure or reduction of much of their pol-mil gathering and analysis elements, as well as a lot of their resources in Latin America and Africa. Expect to see them concentrating on conventional military intel missions and on Asia, Central Asia and the West.
Now what, though? We await to hear of Shlyakhturov’s fate and who succeeds him.
Posted by Mark Galeotti on October 10, 2011
https://inmoscowsshadows.wordpress.com/2011/10/10/the-gru-looking-back-at-the-view-when-shlyakhturov-was-appointed/
