Putin-Murders-1997-2009.doc Original Microsoft Word file
The Putin Murders
A
Brief History of Putintime
March 1997
45-year-old former KGB agent Vladimir Putin
(pictured, left) is plucked from obscurity out of the St.Petersburg local
government apparatus by
President Boris Yeltsin and named Deputy Chief of Staff. In June, he
defends
his PhD dissertation in “strategic planning” at St. Petersburg’s Mining
Institute. Later, this document
proves to have been plagiarized from a
KGB translation of work by U.S.
professors
published many years earlier (as if nobody would notice, and in fact
for quite
a while nobody did).
July 1998
In a second inexplicable move, Yeltsin names
Putin head of the KGB (now called the FSB).
November 1998
Less
than four months after
Putin takes over at the KGB, opposition Duma Deputy
Galina Starovoitova (pictured,
right), the most prominent
pro-democracy Kremlin critic in the nation, is murdered at her
apartment
building in St. Petersburg.
Four months
after that, Putin will play a key role in silencing the Russian
Attorney
General, Yury Skuratov,
who was investigating high-level
corruption in the Kremlin, by airing an illicit sex video involving Skuratov on
national TV. Four months after the dust settles in the Skuratov affair,
Putin will be named Prime Minister.
August 1999
Completing a hat trick of bizarre spontaneous
promotions, proud KGB spy Putin is named by Yeltsin Prime Minister of Russia.
Almost
immediately, Putin orders a massive bombing campaign against the tiny,
defenseless breakaway republic
of Chechnya,
apparently seeing the reassertion of
Russian power there as key to overall resurgence of Russia’s
military and state
security apparatus, his primary political objective. On August 26th,
he’s forced to acknowledge
the horrific consequences of the bombing. Hundreds of civilians are
killed and
tens of thousands are left homeless as civilian targets are attacked.
World
opinion begins to turn starkly against Russia,
especially in Europe, very similarly to the manner in which it has
polarized
against U.S. President George Bush over Iraq.
Putin’s poll numbers in Russia
begin to
slide.
September 1999
An apartment building in the Pechatniki neighborhood
of Moscow
is blown up by a bomb. 94 are killed.
Less than a week later a second bomb destroys a building in Moscow’s Kashirskoye neighborhood,
killing 118. Days after
that, a massive contingent of Russian soldiers is surrounding Chechnya
as
public opposition to the war evaporates. On October 1st, Putin declares
Chechen
president Aslan Maskhadov and
his parliament illegitimate. Russian forces invade.
New Year’s Eve, 1999
Boris
Yeltsin resigns the presidency of Russia,
handing the office to Putin
in order to allow him to run as an incumbent three months later. Given
the
pattern of bizarre promotions Putin has previously received, the move
is hardly
even surprising. So-called “experts” on Russia
scoff at the possibility that Putin could be elected, proclaiming that,
having
tasted freedom, Russia
can
“never go back” to the dark days of the USSR.
March 2000
Despite
being the nominee of a man, Yeltsin, who enjoyed single-digit public
approval
ratings in polls, Vladimir Putin is elected “president” of Russia in a
massive
landslide (he wins nearly twice as many votes as his nearest
competitor).
Shortly thereafter, all hell breaks loose in Chechnya.
Russia
will
ultimately be convicted of human rights violations before the European Court
for
Human Rights and condemned for its abuses of the civilian population by
every
human rights organization under the sun.
[Between April 2000 and March
2002, Russia
plunges into a
nightmarish conflict in Chechnya
eerily similar to what America
now faces in Iraq.
Opposition journalists, especially those who dare to report on what it
going on
in Chechnya,
suddenly start dying. In 2000 alone, reporters Igor Domnikov,Sergey Novikov, Iskandar Khatloni, Sergey Ivanov and
Adam Tepsurgayev are
murdered -- not by hostile fire in Chechnya but in blatant
assassinations at
home in Russia. On
June 16, 2001, at a press conference in Brdo Pri Kranju, Slovenia,
President Bush is asked about Putin: "Is this a man that Americans can
trust?" Bush replies: "I will answer the question. I looked the man
in the eye. I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy. We
had a
very good dialogue. I was able to get a sense of his soul; a man deeply
committed to his country and the best interests of his country. And I
appreciated so very much the frank dialogue."]
April
2003
Sergei Yushenkov,
co-chairman of the Liberal Russia
political party (pictured, left), is gunned down at the entrance of his
Moscow
apartment block. Yushenkov had
been serving as the vice chair of
the group known as the “Kovalev Commission”
which was formed to
informally investigate charges that Putin’s KGB had planted the Pechatniki and Kashirskoye apartment
bombs to whip up support for the Putin’s war in Chechnya after the
formal
legislative investigation turned out to be impossible. Another member
of the
Commission,Yuri Shchekochikhin (see
below) will
perish of poisoning, a third will be severely beaten by thugs, and two
other
members will lose their seats in the Duma.
The Commission’s lawyer,
Mikhail Trepashkin (see below) will be jailed after a secret trial on
espionage
charges. Today, virtually none of the members of the Commission are
left whole
and it is silent.
May 2003
Putin’s popularity in opinion polls slips below 50% after
sliding precipitously while the
conflict in Chechnya
became increasingly bloody. Suddenly, he begins to appear vulnerable,
and oil
billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky begins
to be discussed as one who could unseat him. All hell breaks loose in
Russian
politics.
July
2003
Yuri Shchekochikhin (pictured,
right), a vocal opposition
journalist and member
of the
Russian Dumaand the Kovalev
Commission, suddenly
contracts a mysterious illness. Witnesses reported: “He complained
about
fatigue, and red blotches began to appear on his skin. His internal
organs
began collapsing one by one. Then he lost almost all his hair.” One
ofShchekochikhin’s last
newspaper articles before his
death was entitled “Are
we Russia
or KGB of Soviet Union?” In
it, he described such issues as the
refusal of the FSB to
explain to the Russian Parliament
what poison gas was applied during the Moscow
theater hostage crisis,
and work of secret services from the former Soviet republic
of Turkmenistan,
which operated with
impunity in Moscow
against Russian citizens of Turkoman origin.
According to Wikipedia:
“He also tried to investigate the Three
Whales Corruption Scandal and
criminal activities of FSB officers
related to money laundering through the Bank
of New York and
illegal actions of YevgenyAdamov,
a former Russian Minister of Nuclear Energy. This case was under the
personal
control of Putin. In June of 2003, Shchekochikhin contacted
the FBI and got an American
visa to discuss the case with US authorities. However, he never made it
to the USA
because of
his sudden death on July 3rd. The Russian authorities refused to allow
an autopsy,
but according to Wikipedia his
relatives “managed to send a specimen of his skin to London,
where a tentative diagnosis was made
of poisoning with thallium”
(a poison commonly used by the KGB, at first
suspected in the Litvinenko killing).
October 2003
Assaults on the enemies of the Kremlin reach
fever pitch as the election cycle begins. Within one week at the end of
the
month, two major opposition figures are in prison.
October
22, 2003
Mikhail Trepashkin (pictured,
right), a former KGB spy
and the attorney for the Kovalev Commission,
is arrested for illegal
possession of a firearm (which he claims was planted in his vehicle).
Also retain
to represent some of the victims of the apartment bombings theselves, Trepashkin allegedly
uncovered a trail of a
mysterious suspect whose description had disappeared from the files and
learned
that the man was one of his former FSB colleagues.
He also found a witness
who testified that evidence was doctored to lead the investigation away
from
incriminating the FSB.
The weapons charge againstTrepashkin mysteriously
morphs into a spying
charge handled by a closed military proceeding that is condemned
by the U.S. government as
being a blatant sham, and Trepashkin is sent
to prison for four years. Publius
Pundit reported on Trepashkin’s plight
back
in early December of last year.
October
25, 2003
Just as the presidential election cycle is beginning, Khodorkovsky (pictured,
left) is arrested at the
airport in Novosibirsk.
He will be tried and convicted for tax fraud and sent to Siberia, just
like in
the bad old days of the USSR,
in a show trial all international observers condemn as rigged (his
lawyer has
documented the legal violations in a 75-page treatise).
He is there today, now
facing a second prosecution for the same offense. His company, YUKOS,
is being slowly gobbled up by the Kremlin.
March 2004
With Khodorkovsky conveniently
in prison and the Kovalev Commission
conveniently muzzled, Vladimir Putin is re-elected “president” of Russia,
again
in a landslide despite his poll numbers. He faces no serious
competition from
any opposition candidate. He does not participate in any debates. He
wins a
ghastly, Soviet-like 70% of the vote. Immediately, talk begins of a neo-Soviet
state, with Putin assuming the powers of a dictator. The most public
and
powerful enemies of the regime start dropping like flies.
June
2004
Nikolai Girenko (pictured,
left), a prominent
human rights defender, Professor of Ethnology and expert on racism and
discrimination in the Russian Federation is shot dead in his home in St Petersburg.Girenko’s work
has been crucial in ensuring that racially motivated assaults are
classified as
hate crimes, rather than mere hooliganism, and therefore warrant
harsher
sentences — as well as appearing as black marks on Russia’s public
record.
July
2004
Paul Klebnikov (pictured,
right), editor of the
Russian edition Forbes magazine,
is shot and killed in Moscow. Forbes has
reported that
at the time of his death, Paul was believed to have been investigating
a
complex web of money laundering involving a Chechen reconstruction
fund,
reaching into the centers of power in the Kremlin and involving
elements of
organized crime and the FSB(the
former KGB).
September
2004
Viktor Yushchenko,
anti-Russian candidate for the presidency of the Ukraine,
is poisoned by Dioxin. Yushchenko’s chief
of staff OlegRibachuk suggests
that the poison used was amycotoxin called T-2,
also known as “Yellow Rain,” a Soviet-era
substance which was reputedly used in Afghanistan
as a chemical weapon.
Miraculously, he survives the attack.
[Throughout the next year, a
full frontal assault on the media is launched by the Kremlin. Reporters Without Borders states:
"Working conditions for journalists
continued to
worsen alarmingly in 2005, with violence the most serious threat to
press
freedom. The independent press is shrinking because of crippling fines
and
politically-inspired distribution of government advertising. The
authorities’
refusal to accredit foreign journalists showed the government’s intent
to gain
total control of news, especially about the war in Chechnya."]
September
2006
Andrei Kozlov (pictured,
left), First Deputy
Chairman of Russia’s Central Bank, who strove to stamp out money
laundering
(basically acting on analyses like that of reporterKlebnikov),
the highest-ranking
reformer in Russia, is shot and killed in Moscow. Many media
reports classify Kozlov’s killing
as “an impudent challenge to all Russian authorities” and warn that “failure to
apprehend the killers would send a signal to others that
intimidation of government officials is once again an option.” Less
considered
is the possibility that Kozlov, like Klebnikov, was on
the trail of corruption that would have led into the
Kremlin itself, which then lashed out at him preemptively assuming he
could not
be bought.
October
2006
Anna Politkovskaya (pictured, right), author
of countless books and articles exposing Russian human rights
violations in
Chechnya and attacking Vladimir Putin as a dictator, is shot and killed
at her
home in Moscow. In her book Putin’s
Russia, Politkovskaya had written: “I have
wondered a great deal why I have so got it in for Putin. What is it
that makes
me dislike him so much as to feel moved to write a book about him? I am
not one
of his political opponents or rivals, just a woman living in Russia.
Quite
simply, I am a 45-year-old Muscovite who observed the Soviet Union at its most
disgraceful in the 1970s and ’80s. I really
don’t want to find myself back there again.” Analysts begin to talk
openly of
Kremlin complicity in the ongoing string of attacks. Washington
Post columnist Anne
Applebaum writes:
“Local businessmen had no motivation to kill her — but officials of the
army,
the police and even the Kremlin did. Whereas local thieves might have
tried to
cover their tracks, Politkovskaya’s assassin, like so many Russian
assassins,
did not seem to fear the law. There are jitters already: A few hours
after news
of Politkovskaya’s death became public, a worried friend sent me a link
to an
eerie Russian Web site that displays photographs of ‘enemies of the
people’ —
all Russian journalists and human rights activists, some quite well
known.
Above the pictures is each person’s birth date and a blank space where,
it is
implied, the dates of their deaths will soon be marked. That sort of
thing will
make many, and probably most, Russians think twice before criticizing
the
Kremlin about anything.”
November
2006
Alexander Litvinenko (pictured, left), KGB
defector and author of the book Blowing
up Russia,
which accuses the Kremlin of masterminding the and Pechatniki andKashirskoye bombings
in order to blame Chechen
terrorists and whip up support for an invasion of Chechnya
(which shortly followed),
is fatally poisoned by radioactive Polonium obtained from Russian
sources.
Litivinenko had given
sensational testimony to the
Kovalev Commission and warned
Sergei Yushenkov that
was a KGB target). In his last days Litvinenko himself, as well as
other KGB
defectors, including Oleg
Kalugin, Yuri
Shvets and Mikhail
Trepashkin (who
allegedly actually warned Litvinenko that he had been targeted before
the hit
took place) directly blamed the Kremlin for ordering the poisoning.
Recent press
reports indicate
that British investigators have come to the same conclusion. With
Litvinenko
out of the picture, the only member of the Kovalev Commission left
unscathed is
its 77-year-old namesake chairman, dissident Sergei
Kovalev —
who has
grown notably silent.
March 2007
On Sunday February 25th, the American TV news
magazine Dateline
NBC aired
a report on
the
killing of Litvinenko. MSNBC also
carried a report. The reports confirmed that
British authorities
believe Litvinenko perished in a “state-sponsored” assasination. In the
opening
of the broadcast, Dateline highlighted
the analysis of a senior British reporter and a senior American expert
on Russia
who knew
Litvinennko well. Here’s an excerpt from the MSNBC report:
Daniel McGrory, a senior
correspondent for The Times
of London, has reported many of the developments
in the Litvinenko investigation. He said the police were stuck between
a rock
and a hard place. “While they claim, and the prime minister, Tony
Blair, has
claimed nothing will be allowed to get in the way of the police
investigation,
the reality is the police are perfectly aware of the diplomatic fallout
of this
story,” McGrory said. “Let’s be frank about this: The United States
needs a
good relationship with Russia, and so does Europe,” said Paul M. Joyal,
a
friend of Litvinenko’s with deep ties as a consultant in Russia and the
former
Soviet states. Noting that Russia
controls a significant segment of the world gas market, Joyal said:
“This is a
very important country. But how can you have an important relationship
with a
country that could be involved in activities such as this? It’s a great
dilemma.”
Five
days before the broadcast
aired, shortly after he was interviewed for it, McGrory was
dead. His obituary reads “found dead at his home
on
February 20, 2007, aged 54.” Five days after the broadcast aired, Joyal
(pictured, right) was lying
in a hospital bed after having been shot for no
apparent reason, ostensibly the victim of a
crazed
random street crime. He was returning home after having
dinner with KGB
defector Oleg Kalugin, and had been an aggressive advocate for Georgian
independence from Russian influence. The attack remains unsolved.
CONCLUSION:
Did the Kremlin have anything to do with either Joyal’s or McGrory’s
fates, or
is it just coincidence that both were struck down within days of giving
statements directly blaming the Kremlin for Litvinenko’s killing to the
American press? Would the Kremlin really be so brazen as to attack an
American
for speaking in America?
Whether it did not not is almost beside the point: the thing you can’t
see is
always scarier than the thing you can. The Kremlin is now positioned to
turn
random accidents into weapons. Appelbaum sums it up: “As Russian (and
Eastern
European) history well demonstrates, it isn’t always necessary to kill
millions
of people to frighten all the others: A few choice assassinations, in
the right
time and place, usually suffice. Since the arrest of oil magnate
Mikhail
Khodorkovsky in 2003, no other Russian oligarchs have attempted even to
sound
politically independent. After the assassination of Politkovskaya on
Saturday,
it’s hard to imagine many Russian journalists following in her
footsteps to Grozny
either.”
NOTE:
For more on the Putin murders from a panel of Russia
experts, click here.
January 2009
On
January 19, 2009,
Russian human rights attorney Stanslav Markelov
(pictured,
right) was shot in the back of the head with a silenced pistol as he
left a
press conference at which he announced his intention to sue the Russian
government for its early release of the Col. Yuri Budanov, who murdered
his
18-year-old client in Chechnya five years earlier. Also shot and killed
was
Anastasia Barburova, a young journalism student who was working for
Novaya
Gazeta and who had studied under Anna Politkovskaya, reporting on the
Budanov
proceedings.
July 2009
On July 14, 2009, leading Russian human rights journalist and activist Natalia
Estemirova (pictured,
left), a single mother of a
teenaged daughter, was abducted in front of her home in Grozny,
Chechnya,
spirited across the border into Ingushetia, shot and dumped in a
roadside
gutter. Viewed as the successor to Anna Politkovskaya and by
far the most
prominent living critic of Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov, who had
repeatedly
threatened her life, Estemirova was a member of the “Memorial” human
rights NGO
and a steadfast defender of human rights in Chechnya.
Most recently, she
had been reporting on the barbaric practice of the government in
burning down
the homes of rebel activists, often with women and children locked
inside.
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