Russia’s spies out of control, says new book

LONDON,  (Reuters) – Russia’s security services have  changed a lot since late Soviet days.

They are much worse.

That’s the view of Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan, two  young Russian journalists who have just published a book on the  FSB, the main present-day successor to the powerful Soviet KGB.

“The KGB was a very powerful organisation but at the same  time it was under the strict control of the Communist Party,”  Soldatov told Reuters in an interview in London on Wednesday,  when he and Borogan were promoting their book at a seminar.

“… With the FSB, we have no party control and we have no  parliamentary control … we have got uncontrollable secret  services.”

The Russian security services’ lack of accountability and  their increasingly brutal methods — justified by a bloody  domestic war on Islamist militancy — make them more like the  feared mukhabarat (security police) of the Arab world than the  old Soviet spy agencies, co-author Borogan added.

Their book “The New Nobility” takes its title from former  FSB director Nikolai Patrushev’s phrase in a speech at the end  of 1999 celebrating the return of spy power — led by former KGB  agent and incoming president Vladimir Putin.

Picked by former president Boris Yeltsin in 1999 as a  supposedly malleable successor, Putin quickly showed who was  boss. He filled key Kremlin and state corporation posts with  ex-security service officers, creating a big new power base of  individuals sharing close loyalty to their former employers.

Unchecked by any institution and answerable to nobody, the  “New Nobility” quickly showed their dangerous side.

Russia’s most prominent rights activist, Lyudmila Alexeyeva,  recalled in a recent interview how in the late Soviet era, the  KGB was repressive but less dangerous. “Back then, there were  prisons and psychiatric hospitals, but they didn’t kill anyone,”  she said. “… Murders just didn’t happen. And now they do …”

British prosecutors named former Russian security officer  Andrei Lugovoy as a suspect in the radioactive poisoning of  Putin critic Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006, and Russian  investigators named an FSB officer as one of the suspects in the  murder the same year of crusading journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

EXTRAVAGANT TASTES

Today’s FSB generals, the authors say, resemble Russia’s old  Tsarist aristocracy in more ways than one.

Their taste for an extravagant lifestyle financed by wealth  obtained through their positions contrasts with the Soviet era,  when the secret service chiefs had a temporary hold on perks and  privileges that disappeared when they left their posts.

“Russia’s new security services are more than simply  servants of the state,” the authors write. “They are landed  property owners and powerful players.”

The book — which has not been published in Russia or  reported on by Russian media — recounts how 99 acres of  Moscow’s most expensive land, along the exclusive Rublyovka  Highway, was handed over to top FSB agents in 2003/4 for token  sums under a legal scheme to recognise their years of service.
Some plots were then resold for tens of millions of dollars.

FSB agents and their overseas counterparts in the SVR  (Foreign Intelligence Service) are now used increasingly to  defend Russian oligarchs’ business interests, Soldatov says.

“In 2007 Putin openly admitted when he appointed former  prime minister Mikhail Fradkov as chief of foreign intelligence  that the new task for foreign intelligence was to protect the  interests of Russian companies abroad”, he explained.

Examples included a letter from Patrushev to Russia’s  federal anti-monopoly body asking it to bar Norwegian telecoms  firm Telenor from buying more shares in its Russian affiliate  Vimpelcom because Telenor had “too many spies”, Soldatov added.
“In this case, it looks like corporations used the FSB,” he  said.