The Daily Telegraph

A long and sordid history of murder overseas

- By Nigel West Nigel West is the author of Cold War Spymaster (published in August by Frontline).

The identifica­tion of Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov as the two GRU assassins believed to be responsibl­e for the attempt on the lives of Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury takes us back to the darkest days of the Cold War, when trained KGB killers were deployed to hunt down defectors – often using theatrical methods to eliminate them.

Nikolai Khokhlov – a KGB agent who defected to the United States in 1954 – survived a near-deadly dose of radioactiv­e thallium that was slipped into his coffee after he gave a speech in Frankfurt.

The unusual tradecraft employed in March, involving a fake Nina Ricci perfume spray, is also reminiscen­t of the ingenious cyanide gas gun developed by the KGB that Bogdan Stashinsky used to assassinat­e two Ukrainian nationalis­t leaders in the Fifties. A ricin pellet gun disguised as an umbrella was used against Georgi Markov in 1978.

The GRU itself has a long Cold War pedigree. It is the unreconstr­ucted successor to the Fourth Department of the General Staff of the Soviet Red Army, originally created by Trotsky, and is based at its old headquarte­rs on the edge of the Khodynka military airfield in Moscow, known as “the aquarium”. It is an elite, highly discipline­d organisati­on that suffered few defectors during the Cold War, in comparison with its rival, the KGB. According to one successful GRU defector, Vladimir Rezun, now in hiding, new GRU recruits endure a film depicting the execution of a GRU traitor being fed into an incinerato­r, strapped to a stretcher.

The GRU supplies defence attachés across the world, staffs the Spetsnaz special forces and assigns selected personnel to undertake extrajudic­ial killings. The past record of its involvemen­t in murders highlights not just its boldness in operating overseas, but also the reception that the two Salisbury poisoners are likely to have received in Russia.

Take the murder of Zelimkhan Yandarbiye­v, the former Chechen leader, in February 2004. He was killed, with his two bodyguards, when a bomb detonated under his SUV in Doha, Qatar, as they drove home from a mosque. Suspicion quickly focused on two men of Slavic appearance seen carrying a plastic bag in the car park of the mosque.

Six days later, the Qatari police arrested three Russians, including two GRU officers, who were convicted of the murder in June 2004. In their confession­s – which they alleged had been extracted under torture – they identified the Russian defence minister, Sergei Ivanov, as the person who had issued them with the orders to kill Yandarbiye­v. Six months later they were repatriate­d to Moscow to serve the remainder of their sentences, but instead received a heroes’ welcome and were released.

The Kremlin, which claimed that the two GRU officers had been sent to Qatar on a legitimate anti-terrorism liaison assignment, hired some very high-priced lawyers to defend them, including the firm founded by President Vladimir Putin’s chief of staff. Such an interventi­on indicates the level of sponsorshi­p enjoyed by the GRU from the Russian leadership.

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