Russian spy chief arrested, officials split over Ukraine invasion
Russian authorities are split over their invasion of
Ukraine, with a commander of the Russian intelligence service placed under
house arrest, according to reports in recent weeks.
Colonel-General Sergei Beseda, the head of the Fifth Service
of the FSB intelligence service, and Beseda's deputy were being held under
house arrest, according to a report by the Center for European Policy Analysis
(CEPA) non-partisan think tank.
The Fifth Service was responsible for providing Russian
President Vladimir Putin with intelligence about Ukraine leading up to the war.
"It looks like two weeks into the war, it finally dawned on Putin that he
was completely misled. The department, fearful of his responses, seems to have
told Putin what he wanted to hear," Russian investigative journalists
Irina Borogan and Andrei Soldatov wrote in the CEPA report.
Russian authorities have not confirmed the reports that
Beseda is under house arrest.
The two journalists added that they have been following the
Department of Operative Information (DOI), the FSB's foreign intelligence
branch, since it was founded as a directorate in the late 1990s.
Beseda was targeted by sanctions implemented by the US, UK
and European Union in 2014, amid unrest in Ukraine and the Russian occupation
of Crimea.
On Saturday, a US official told The Wall Street Journal that
the reports about Beseda being placed under house arrest were
"credible," adding that bickering had broken out between the FSB and
Russian Defense Ministry concerning the invasion of Ukraine.
While foreign media reports and statements by foreign
officials indicated that Russian authorities initially believed that they would
be able to take Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, within a matter of days, nearly a
month later Russian forces have still failed to do so, as Ukrainian forces put
up a strong resistance and Western-aid pours in to the country.
Jeffrey Edmonds, a former CIA and National Security Council
official specializing in the region, told The Wall Street Journal that "It
is hard to imagine some senior intelligence person talking with Putin and not
telling Putin what he wants to hear, especially if it is a belief that is
deeply held, like Putin’s beliefs about Ukraine."
Vladimir Osechkin, an exiled Russian human rights activist,
confirmed the arrest to The Times as well, adding that FSB officers had
searched over 20 addresses around Moscow of fellow FSB officers suspected of
being in contact with journalists.
“The formal basis for conducting these searches is the
accusation of the embezzlement of funds earmarked for subversive activities in
Ukraine," said Osechkin to the Times. “The real reason is unreliable,
incomplete and partially false information about the political situation in
Ukraine.”
Osechkin has posted whistleblower reports allegedly written
by analysts from the FSB in recent weeks on his Gulagu.ru website, with one
analyst writing "now they are methodically blaming us (FSB). We are being
reprimanded for our analysis,” according to The Hill.
A number of additional Russian officials have been removed
from their positions amid the war in Ukraine, including Gen. Roman Gavrilov,
with Russian media reports split on whether he was dismissed or resigned.
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