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Monday, February 26, 2024
KGB Punch: With Every Murdered Enemy, Putin’s Grip On His Terrified People Grows Tighter
Ben Macintyre (seen in the below photo), the author of The Spy and the Traitor: The
Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War, A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and
the Great Betrayal, and other fine books on spies and espionage, wrote
a good column for the London Times on Russian dictator Vladimir Putin’s use of assassination.
The
column also appeared in the Australian.
In
Russian spy jargon, an assassination hit squad is known as a “Mercader”, after
Ramon Mercader, the Spanish communist agent who buried an ice pick in Leon
Trotsky’s head as he sat in his study in Mexico City. Mercader was declared a
“Hero of the Soviet Union” on his release from prison 20 years later.
Today, Russia’s
“Mercaders” are off the leash across the world: from the “Polar Wolf” gulag in
the Russian Arctic, where the opposition leader Alexei Navalny was murdered last week, to
the underground garage near Benidorm where the bullet-riddled body of the
Russian defector Maxim Kuzminov was found a few days earlier.
The weapons deployed for
traditional Russian “wet work” (mokroye delo) have changed over time: the ice
pick that killed Trotsky and the poisoned umbrella tip that saw off the
Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov have given way to polonium (Alexander Litvinenko),
novichok nerve agent (Sergei Skripal), the plunge from the balcony that ends
the lives of so many of Vladimir Putin’s critics and enemies, or the
spectacular air explosion that immolated the Wagner mercenary Yevgeny
Prigozhin.
Navalny may have been
killed by the notorious “KGB punch”, a lethal blow to the heart administered to
a person already enfeebled by cold.
But the idea remains the same: a theatrical symbolic act of state-sponsored homicide, to send a warning to other would-be opponets, cow the Russian populace and stun the world with its brazen brutality, all suffused with just enough mystery for a shrugging Kremlin denial.
Stalin saw assassination
as integral to his foreign policy, the external expression of the Great Terror:
dissidents, defectors, spies, ideological heretics, all were potential targets.
In 1942 the military intelligence section of the Red Army established a
specialised unit to liquidate “anti-Soviet elements”.
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