“In the United States, one of the intelligence documents was declassified, suggesting that the untimely deaths of Kremlin opponents were most likely political murders; the document also mentions the poisoning of Viktor Yushchenko. This is reported in a Bloomberg publication. The memo was released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Until now, the US intelligence circles have often speculated that a number of unexpected”, — write on: ua.news
In the United States, one of the intelligence documents was declassified, suggesting that the untimely deaths of Kremlin opponents were most likely political murders; the document also mentions the poisoning of Viktor Yushchenko.
This is reported in a Bloomberg publication.
The memo was released by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Until now, US intelligence circles have often speculated that a number of unexpected deaths of opponents of the Russian ruler were targeted political murders, but concrete documents to this effect have not yet been publicly available.
The document was a consequence of the provision within the project regarding the financing of intelligence agencies back in 2016 – members of Congress called on the Office to prepare a list of Russian social and political figures who were most likely killed by Russian special services.
Journalists who were interested in the topic then tried to get this information officially, but the first attempts were unsuccessful. However, repeated attempts of requests after a few years eventually ended in success – the document was provided, obscuring some secret fragments.
The memo is dated July 2016 and is titled “Kremlin-ordered murders abroad are likely to continue.”
The intelligence community in it predicts that Russia will continue to use its special services and other loyal structures to eliminate those it considers a threat to either its interests or the Putin regime.
The 2004 murder in Qatar, where two representatives of the Russian special services killed the Chechen leader, is considered the first “obvious” case of murder abroad at the behest of Putin.
They also note that the poisoning of former special services officer Lytvynenko was “almost certainly” a murder ordered by Moscow. Political murders include the death of Russian businessman Alexander Perepilychny, who died in Britain in 2019 as a result of the effects of a biological toxin.
The document also mentions the poisoning of then-presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko in 2003 – in the section on political leaders in countries that gained independence after the collapse of the USSR and whom the Kremlin considered a threat to itself. At the same time, the note suggests the involvement of Russian special services not as an assumption of the Western intelligence community, but as “a conclusion of its supporters.”
The death of “at least several” leaders of pro-Russian militants in ORDLO, in particular “Batman” (Aleksandra Bednova), is considered a probable murder on instructions from Moscow.
We will remind that the aggressor country actively finances terrorist organizations, trying to spread its influence in the world. This was stated by Canadian Defense Minister Bill Blair during his participation in the International Security Forum in Halifax.
the Russian Federation has developed a whole system of torture for prisoners. Individual specialists are even trained in various types of torture.
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