Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 20 – Russia’s
special services have “never thought about dropping the use of kidnapping”
against those Moscow has identified as enemies and who have fled the country,
according to an article in today’s “Novaya versiya.” But “the quality of such
operations has so improved that there is practically no evidence of them in the
press.”
Indeed, Georgy Filin writes, the
current Russian efforts build on the more famous ones of Soviet times, when
Soviet agents frequently kidnapped and killed leaders of the anti-Bolshevik
White Movement. That experience, far
better known than the current Russian one, is still studied in Israel, France,
Germany and Poland (versia.ru/articles/2012/nov/19/prokralis).
Many
in Russia and the West had assumed until very recently that this practice had
stopped and that “[Russian] special services had ceased to kidnap people abroad
already in Soviet times.” Such people
noted that “KGB and GRU veterans had more than once acknowledged that already
in the 1970s, Leonid Brezhnev stopped sanctioning such operations.”
But
the case of Leonid Razvozhayev, who was seized in Kyiv and returned to Moscow
last month, has cast doubt on those assurances and led some to conclude that
Moscow is reviving “the experience of a half century ago when intelligence
officers and party functionaries who had fled to the West were returned in the
trunks of cars with diplomatic plates.”
As Filin repeatedly acknowledges, documenting
this extremely murky area is anything but easy.
Many of the documents are classified or otherwise unavailable, and both
those who carry out such operations and those who are the relatives and friends
of the victims put out so many variations of the story that sorting out truth
from invention is hard.
Nevertheless, the “Novaya Versiya” writer says, certain
things are clear. The current wave of kidnappings of those who fled abroad
began in 2006 when the Duma approved amendments to the law on state security
and countering terrorism and the Federation Council approved an order on
countering terrorism abroad.
In 2007, Ruslan Eliyev, a Chechen who has a
comrade in arms of Zelimkhan Endarbiyev and who was living in Azerbaijan, was persons
“unknown” but then found dead near the Chechen village of Samashki. Many say that Sulim Yamadayev and his special
Russan-backed GRU “East” Battalion was involved, Filin says.
“If seizing a militant out of
Azerbaijan was comparatively easy” – that Eliyev’s “fate” was repeated in the
case of “several of his comrades in arms” – “to take a dangerous terrorist from
the territory of Turkey was a much more complicated affair,” the “Novaya
versiya” journalist continues.
But that is what happened to Khamzat
Gitsba, a former colleague of Shamil Basayev. Gitsba had first moved to
Abkhazia in 2000 but then “resettled” in Turkey, apparently “out of a concern
that [the Abkhaz] might hand him over to the Russian authorities. But then while living in Istanbul, he was
seized in July 2007, and on August 17, his corpse turned up in Abkhazia.
“There are a bass for asserting that
the special services of Russia were involved in Gitsba’s kidnapping,” Filin
adds, noting that two other field commanders, Gadzhi Edilsultanov and Islam
Dhanibekov, not only stated that but were subsequently found dead in Turkey in
the fall and winter of 2008.
These actions,
of course, recall the Soviet kidnapping of Aleksandr Kutepov, a White Russian
general who had organized subversive actions against the Soviets, for which he
was kidnapped and later tied on a Soviet ship sailing between Marseilles and
Novorossiisk, of Yevgeny Miller, another White leader, and of Swedish diplomat
Raul Wallenberg.
Such actions by the Russian security
services now, of course, are directed against “bandits” who Moscow says have “the
blood of dozens if not hundreds” of Russian compatriots. But that doesn’t
reduce concerns about this latest echo in Vladimir Putin’s Russia of one of the
worst aspects of the Soviet policy -- especially when it is directed, as was the case with Razvozhayev, someone with no connections to terrorism at all.
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