Denis Alimov, FSB Alfa veteran and senior operative of Russia's new and "most secretive" assassination unit, walked into El Dorado Airport in Bogotá on Feb 24 looking like a tourist heading to Cartagena. He walked out in handcuffs.
He was undone by Google Translate.
🧵New @TheInsider investigation with @DerSpiegel — thread below.
The story begins in December 2022. Russia is not winning the war in Ukraine, and needs to ramp up its hybrid warfare on the West. Averyanov's Unit 29155, its previous solution, has been burned by our investigations; its operatives' biometrics were in every customs database.
The solution is an air-gapped, secret unit. Military Unit 75127, also known as Center 795.
The new unit is designed to be untraceable. Hidden inside the Kalashnikov Concern. Reporting directly to Gerasimov. A shadow army in a corporate suit. With PowerPoint presentations.
This "top secret" unit fielded ~500 officers and ran a rigorous vetting process: 535 candidates, 177 rejected (33%). Polygraph. Psych testing. Interview. Recruitment drawn from FSB Alfa, Vympel, GRU Spetsnaz, FSO - everyone wants to join the new elite squad. Very few can.
The secret unit (in fact, a full-cycle intelligence and black-ops operation + a small army) is the brainchild of Andrey Bokarev, billionaire owner of train & weapons manufacturer Transmashholding, and secret puppeteer at the Kalashnikov concern. He wants his own army, like Prigozhin.
To command this unit, he convinces the MoD to appoint Denis Fisenko, Russia's top tactical shooter and decorated FSB Alfa Spetsnaz veteran. Conveniently, he's already working at Kalashnikov.
Fisenko poaches the "creme de la creme" of assassins and saboteurs from everywhere: FSB, FSO (Putin's secret service), even Averyanov's GRU - but only operatives that haven't been burned yet (or so they thought). Even from Belarusian KGB (thanks for their cover ids, @cpartisans)
@cpartisans The new unit is housed at Kalashnikov-owned Patriot Park. Conveniently, it's a stone's throw from GRU's Spetsnaz based at Kubinka, outside Moscow. But it has the plausible deniability of a "weapons testing shooting polygon". Perfect cover for a secret army of killers.
@cpartisans In the early days, the new unit is focused on Ukraine: it has a superior arsenal of drones, SMERCH rocket launchers, and sniper teams - from a base in Belgorod, they try to attack key Ukrainian command centers, HIMARS stocks, political and military leaders. Not much success.
@cpartisans We've been able to reconstruct the complete chain of command and hundreds of named operatives working inside the most secret of all units (at least by design if not in practice).
@cpartisans In 2023, Fisenko recruits Denis Alimov - a trained assassin with a long track record at FSB's Alfa Spetsnaz. His specialty: jailing (or killing, as the case may be) of militants and separatists from the Caucasus, including Chechnya. Now, he'll do the same, but all over the globe.
@cpartisans He begins by recruiting "lures" - people from the Caucasus he has previously jailed - they are offered a get-out-of-jail card if they agree to collaborate - and become baits for the Kremlin's targets. They even get one-way tickets to Europe. With strings attached, of course.
@cpartisans Alimov also works with two notorious Serb recruiters of mercenaries: Dejan Berić and Davor Savičić. Likely through their network, Alimov is introduced to a Montenegro citizen residing in the US. Darko Durovic is perfect for the job: free to travel, ready for anything.
@cpartisans Darko takes two trips to Russia - in July and October 2024. In the second trip, he meets Alimov at a cafe near FSB's monstrosity of a HQ, Lubyanka. There he hands over to him a downpayment of 60k (actual photo below. he literally sent an email boasting with the cash)
@cpartisans After both trips - disguised as "vacation trips to Turkey", the FBI greet the returning Durovic with questions if he went, by chance, to Russia? Both times he barefacedly lies that he didn't - unaware they know literally everything.
So here's the nugget of the story: how DID the FBI know everything? Well, the answer is...because Durovic and his handler from Center 795...Russia's most secretive squad...used Google Translate to translate messages to one another. The FBI literally had ...Durovic's diary, live.
@cpartisans Durovic, monitored by the FBI, traveled to Europe to locate two targets Alimov had tasked him with finding. He had been promised $1.5 million for the "legal deportation" (ahem) of either. A third target, Darko was told, would yield $10 m - dead or alive.
@cpartisans In March 2025, Durovic was arrested. It is not clear what prompted his handler Alimov to take the risky move - a year later - to travel out of Russia, but he did. Maybe in search of a new Durovic? Or maybe taking matters in his own hands? We don't know, but he made that blunder.
@cpartisans On 23 February 2026, leaked messages show, he desperately tried to buy a burner phone for travel abroad. Late that night, he was seen departing Vnukovo airport to Istanbul, under a false name. His maiden voyage. Less than 24 hours he landed in Colombia. In handcuffs.
FSB announced the arrests of two Russian citizens who allegedly organized the attempt on Gen. Alexeev. One is a 66-year old Ukrainian-born man who was detained in Dubai, but the other one - V. Vasin, 67 - works for an FSB company manufacturing surveillance tools. Plot twist.
At least through Aug 2025, Viktor Vasin was employed as "chief expert" at NTC Atlas, launched by FSB and now part of military-industrial behemoth Rostec.
An archived CV from 2014 shows he graduated from Russia's military command communications academy, describes himself as "master of military affairs" and "senior officer - chief of staff of a regiment" before switching to commercial jobs in the 90s.
and now, @business's incredible scoop: "[Kirill] Dmitriev suggested sharing [with Witkoff] a paper informally and said he was confident *that even if the US didn’t completely take Russia’s version they would at least do something very close to it.*".
I've been reporting to @Meta fake profiles that impersonate me on Facebook. Meta refuses to remove the impersonators, for some inscrutable reason considering impersonation of an investigative journalist to *not* be a violation or their terms. This is irresponsible and dangerous.
. Not only did @Meta not remove the impersonators, but are *actively* pushing them to people. This is a fake account created in 2021. Facebook is suggesting to someone to add this fake person as their friend. Just imagine the risks from this irresponsible behavior.
@Meta To my real account, I constantly get unsolicited tips from whistleblowers who trust me. Imagine what would happen if/when a whistleblower contacts a fake account created by a bad state actor. @Meta is not simply helping spread disinformation, it's actively endangering lives.
Pavel Durov, Telegram's founder, claims he was poisoned in 2018 (symptoms he describes are indeed are consistent with nerve agents/organoposphates). He chose "not to tell my colleagues so I wouldn't scare them"
I believe him this happened. Sadly, he didn't volunteer information on where this happened (I wish he had, so we could triangulate the usual suspects - in 2018 he was a MAJOR thorn in the side of Russian authorities). But thanks to leaked databases we can have some guesses.
Based on leaked travel data, he spent most of the time in 2018 in Dubai, interspersed with stays in Switzerland, France and the UK. Interestingly (likely coincidentally), he left the UK for Dubai a day after the Skripal poisoners left London for Moscow.
In our new investigation into Russia's use of children for their military drone program, crucial evidence came from @tashurkevich's undercover phone calls. Here are some of the most striking confessions she extracted.
What are the tasks assigned to the kids? Well they sound like things from Ender's Game (link to full investigation here: )
Here Tatsiana calls "Maksim" who explains the kids' "oath of silence" in mentioning the war.
If anyone had any doubts about the subvertive nature of Chinese AI freebies, here's a good example.
I decided to ask @deepseek_ai to do a mundane job: edit the text of a recent @the_ins_ru article to make it more vocal-delivery friendly, so we can record it as a podcast. SFSG.
Here's the beginning of the original article that DeepSeek totally promised would not alter, but for style edits
And here's the offered text that I almost choked while reading out to my daughter.