@eliothiggins.bsky.social Profile picture
Nov 26, 2022 16 tweets 5 min read Read on X
This week, a Russian couple living in Sweden for the past 20 years were arrested, with the husband detained under suspicion of working for the Russian intelligence services. @christogrozev did some digging and made some interesting discoveries about their neighbours in Moscow.
The husband, wife and a family member were registered as owners of the flat in October 1999, located at Zorge street 36 in Moscow. It’s unclear if they ever lived in the apartment, as the couple moved to Sweden soon afterwards.
This building is packed full of interesting residents. The apartment number of the couple arrested in Sweden is 282, and just down the corridor is apartment 288, the home of Denis Sergeev, the 3rd suspect in the Skripal poisoning:
bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-eu…
Major General Andrey Averyanov, the head of the GRU’s Unit 29155, the clandestine sabotage and assassination behind multiple arms depot explosions and poisonings, including the Skripal and Emelian Gebrev poisonings, is also a resident in the same building:
Major General Andrey Ilchenko, linked GRU disinformation operations, also resides in the same apartment building, along with many other members of Unit 29155. We previously linked Ilchenko to the activities of the “independent” Bonanza Media:
bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-eu…
According to documents from the Swedish District Court and the police, the husband (pictured below) detained in Sweden is said to have started intelligence activities against the USA in 2013, and then against Sweden in July 2014.
The couple owned a number of companies in Sweden, including companies that dealt with ship and aircraft equipment, computers and IT services, program development and financing of commercial projects.
For several years, one of these companies was in fact controlled by a retired GRU colonel, through a company based in Cyprus. The man, now in his 70s, allowed himself to be interviewed under his full name a couple of years ago in the book "ГРУ. Поединок с черными половекнами"
Many years earlier, his name appeared in the United States: During a hearing in the Senate in 1983, a senator asked to be presented with a list of all Soviet diplomats who, in the period 1974 to 1983, had been expelled for espionage, from all countries throughout the world.
The couple also have a family connection to a former head of Swedish intelligence. The man worked as head of the Military Security and Intelligence Service, MUST, for several years. The family connection between the couple and the former MUST boss was established after he retired
There’s more development to come from Bellingcat and partners on this story, but you can read the latest developments here in Norwegian:
vg.no/nyheter/utenri…
And here in Swedish:
dn.se/sverige/missta…
Clarification to the DN.se article this came from:
New - One of the persons registered as owner of the flat at Zorge was Elena Koulkova's daughter. She is on the board of a Swedish company together with the detained Skvortsov. She shared an apartment with the son of the former high-ranking office from Sweden's military Intel.
Sergey Skvortsov and Elena Koulkova are the two Russians detained by Swedish authorities, as detailed in the below article
thetimes.co.uk/article/couple…
The irony in all this is I've actually not watch The Americans yet.
I'm worried if I start now they'll just seem unrealistically competent.

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More from @EliotHiggins

Nov 4, 2024
It's been brought to my attention that there's videos published on social media claiming I've made various statements about the US election, related to election integrity. These are part of a Russian disinformation campaign, and the quotes are fabricated, but it's nice to know the Russians hold the value of my opinions in such high regard.
I've previously discussed other videos in this campaign in the below thread:
More details of the campaign can be found in this thread
Read 10 tweets
Oct 22, 2024
🧵 1/7: The European Court of Human Rights has ruled in favor of Russian NGOs and media groups (including @Bellingcat), declaring Russia's "foreign agent" legislation a violation of fundamental human rights. The court found that the law imposes undue restrictions on freedom of expression & association.
2/7: The law requires NGOs & individuals receiving foreign funds to register as “foreign agents,” facing stigma, harsh reporting requirements, and severe penalties. This label implies foreign control—without proof—and misleads the public
3/7: The Court noted that the "foreign agent" label, linked to spies & traitors, damages the reputation of those designated and leads to a chilling effect on civil society and public discourse.
Read 9 tweets
Oct 15, 2024
It's currently 9:11am, this post has 3 views, and no retweets or likes on an account with 75 followers. Let's see how long it takes for it to get several hundred retweets, and a few tens of thousands of views. Image
In the last 15 minutes, that tweet just gained 15.7k views, 187 likes, with no retweets. Two other tweets with similarly fake stores, posted around the same time, with similar profiles, have also suddenly gain a couple of hundred likes and around the same amount of views. This is, in real time, how a Russian disinformation campaign is using Twitter to promote its fake stories.Image
Image
Image
The thing is, nearly all of this engagement, apart from about 10 views and none of the likes, are entirely inauthentic. This doesn't help them reach genuine audiences, it's just boosting their stats so when they report back to their paymasters they can tell them how many views, likes and retweets they got, but they're all fake. It's effectively the people running these campaigns scamming their paymasters to make them think it's working, when it's not at all.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 25, 2024
A new fake Bellingcat story, from a fake video claiming to be from Fox News. What's interesting about this one is I viewed the tweet 10 minutes ago, and it had 5 views, and suddenly it jumped to 12.5k, then 16.2k views in less than 5 minutes, with zero retweets or likes. Image
To me this suggests there's a bot network being used to boost views of tweets used in this disinformation campaign.
In 90 seconds this tweet just gained 154 retweets, another sign of bot activity. Image
Image
Read 22 tweets
Sep 10, 2024
It's clear this is a coordinated attack from pro-Orban media which they really don't want being noticed outside of Hungary, but what they don't seem to realise is I'm now going to use what they did at every presentation I do on disinformation to audiences across the world.
What's notable is the accusations made against Bellingcat were all taken (uncredited) from an article publishing by MintPress claiming we've loads of intelligence agents working for us, which even the original MintPress article fails to prove.
Which to me just means I get to add a couple more slides to the presentation I'll be doing about this, to audiences made up of exactly the sort of people they didn't want to find out about this.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 5, 2024
State actors see alternative media ecosystems as a vehicle for promoting their agendas, and take advantage of that by not just covertly funding them, but also giving them access to their officials and platforming them at places like the UN.
A recent example of that is Jackson Hinkle going to Eastern Ukraine, then getting invited to the UN by Russia to speak at a press conference, and that footage being used by state media as evidence of "experts" rejecting the "mainstream narratives" on Ukraine.
A lack of transparency around the funding of the individuals and websites that are part of these alternative media ecosystems allows for state actors to get away with their covert influence, a clear example of which we've seen over the last 24 hours.
Read 5 tweets

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