Earlier this month, Italian cities saw a pro-Russian billboard campaign: “Russia is not our enemy” was written on billboards that also depicted an Italy-Russia handshake. The billboards also called on stopping to provide money for “weapons for Ukraine and Israel”. 1/15
Ukraine’s Embassy in Italy responded quickly to the campaign saying that it was “deeply concerned by the arrogance of Russian propaganda” in Rome and asking the Rome authorities “to reconsider granting permits for such posters that have a clear purpose of rehabilitating the image of the aggressor state” 2/15
CNN alleged that an Italian group called “Sovranità Popolare” (Popular Sovereignty) was behind the campaign (), but the group itself – although avowedly pro-Russian – denied it was responsible for the campaign: 3/15edition.cnn.com/2024/09/13/eur… sovranitapopolare.org/2024/09/25/gue…
An investigation by Massimiliano Coccia @maxcoccia revealed that it was an Italian antivaxx, anti-5G and pro-Putin activist Domenico Aglioti who coordinated the campaign . Aglioti himself claimed that the campaign was crowd-funded. 4/15linkiesta.it/2024/09/manife…
That may be – unless there is evidence suggesting otherwise – but the September campaign was an echo of a similar campaign in summer this year, and that campaign can be traced to actual Russian operatives. 5/15
The summer campaign also involved numerous posters across Italy (starting in northern Italy, a bastion of Matteo Salvini’s far-right Lega party), and was coordinated by the Veneto-Russia Cultural Association presided by Palmarino Zoccatelli. 6/15
It was also Zoccatelli’s Association that was responsible for opening a “centre of representation” of the “Donetsk People’s Republic” (DNR) in Verona in 2019. 7/15
In addition to Zoccatelli, the board of the Association features two prominent figures of the Italian pro-Russian milieu: Stefano Valdegamberi and Eliseo Bertolasi. 8/15
Valdegamberi is a long-time Russian asset who was, until 2023, linked to the Lega party. One of Valdegamberi’s Russian handlers was Sargis Mirzakhanian (see more on him here: ), and Valdegamberi was known for taking pleasure in entertaining his Russian colleagues with his rather horrible singing. 9/15icct.nl/sites/default/…
Bertolasi is yet another Russian asset, but a more interesting one. He was an associate researcher of Tiberio Graziani’s pro-Russian Institute of Advanced Studies in Geopolitics and Auxiliary Sciences, and used to be – perhaps still is – an Italian correspondent of a number of Russian state-controlled media including Rossiya Segodnya and Sputnik. Bertolasi also contributed to the development of the Lombardy-Russia Cultural Association founded by the Lega party. Bertolasi is in the centre on this picture 10/15
It was probably Bertolasi’s work as a correspondent for Russian state-controlled media that determined the name “Writer” as his field alias in the Russian services. One of Bertolasi’s Russian handlers was – and perhaps still is – Russian FSB officer Aleksey Stovbun (codename “Erudite”) whose cover story is “a journalist”. 11/15
In addition to Bertolasi, Stovbun handled several assets in other countries. As an investigation by the Latvia Public Media showed, in Latvia Stovbun (right) handled Igors Bobirs (left), who died in custody in 2023 12/15 lsm.lv/raksts/zinas/l…
The Latvian investigation also identified Serbian pro-Kremlin activist Dragana Trifković as yet another Russian asset handled by Stovbun. I noticed her already in 2014, when she was an “observer” at some fake election in the DNR and hung out with Russian neo-Nazis: (1) (2) 13/15
Dragana Trifković worked with Yevgeniy Prigozhin’s African network in 2018 (I wrote about AFRIC here: ), and also developed contacts with the Alternative for Germany (AfD), the biggest pro-Kremlin party in Western Europe today. 14/15 epde.org/reports/fake-e…
But Stovbun has also handled assets in the Czech Republic (codename “Lawyer”) and Uzbekistan (codename “Doctor”), and who knows where else. One can only hope that more identities will be revealed in some not-so-distant future. 15/15
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As Russia grows concerned about the resumption of US arms deliveries to Ukraine and the introduction of new, more damaging sanctions by the US, it is playing yet another trick to delay Washington’s measures. 1/5
This latest ploy is the so-called “new and different approach” allegedly proposed to Marco Rubio by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov during their meeting in Malaysia earlier today. 2/5
What exactly this “approach” entails remains unclear. Rubio himself said he “wouldn’t characterise it as something that guarantees peace, but it’s a concept [he] will take back to the president today”. 3/5
Putin’s daughter, Katerina Tikhonova, is rumoured to be under consideration as a potential successor to her father as Russia’s leader. This idea is presumably being pushed by the Kovalchuk brothers, who are close to Putin. 1/5
I still don’t really see Putin vacating his position before his physical demise – although, of course, he could remain the major power broker behind whoever he selects to succeed him. 2/5
Western mainstream media have played a major and deeply disturbing role in amplifying the ideas of Russian fascist ideologue Alexander Dugin, both in the West and beyond. 1/10
By falsely portraying Dugin as having considerable – if not definitive – influence on Kremlin thinking, they encouraged far-right as well as non-far-right sympathisers of the Putin regime around the world to regard his fascist ideas as legitimate critiques of Western liberal democracy. 2/10
The warped logic underpinning this is as follows: if one agrees with Putin’s view of the West, and if Putin is presumed to be influenced by Dugin (as Western media often claim), then it appears reasonable to turn to Dugin’s work as the supposed source of Putin’s anti-Western outlook. 3/10
Interesting details have emerged about the elimination yesterday of Zaur Gurtsiyev, a Russian war criminal who commanded air operations during the capture of Mariupol in Ukraine in 2022. 1/4
According to VChK-OGPU sources, Gurtsiyev was drawn into a scheme involving a homosexual honey trap. He met a man on a gay dating website, and they exchanged explicit photos. 2/4
The man was part of a set-up. When they eventually agreed to meet in person, he was given a device supposedly intended to record compromising material on Gurtsiyev. 3/4
Playing for time while preparing a new offensive against Ukraine and further sabotage operations across wider Europe, the Kremlin has – at this stage still unofficially – voiced five major demands, according to Reuters sources. 1/6
Putin “wants a ‘written’ pledge by major Western powers not to enlarge the U.S.-led NATO alliance eastwards”. Of course, NATO is one of the organisations Putin fears most – so how exactly will Russia keep destabilising Moldova and Georgia, and continue destroying Ukraine, if they join NATO? 2/6
Russia “also wants Ukraine to be neutral”. That’s an odd demand: Ukraine’s neutrality was enshrined in its Constitution when Russia invaded and occupied part of Ukraine back in 2014! What's the point of being neutral again if that did not deter Russia from invading the country? 3/6
Vladimir Medinsky, the head of the Russian delegation at the Russia-Ukraine talks, stated that Russia “fought Sweden for 21 years” and is prepared to wage war against Ukraine “however long it takes” – “Russia is prepared to fight forever”. 1/5
Medinsky is not a random adviser to Putin; he oversees the historical revisionism mechanism, one of three key tools used to enforce Putin’s worldview on the West and Ukraine. The other two are pan-Russian ultranationalism and dehumanising political technology. 2/5
The mechanism of historical revisionism sacralises Russian history and embeds a sense of perpetuity in the idea of a Western conspiracy against Russia, with Ukraine portrayed as merely one malign element among many. 3/5