Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Spotlight shines on Russia’s ascendant GRU

- By Angela Charlton

PARIS — It seems like a spy film parody — two burly Russian agents staying in a low-end London hotel and doctoring a perfume flask with deadly nerve agent, oblivious to the security cameras filming them along the way.

The operation to poison ex-spy Sergei Skripal in Britain was either botched, or intentiona­lly obvious. But experts say it’s hallmark GRU, the Russian military spy agency with a brutish reputation, high-risk operations to damage Russia’s enemies, or simply strike fear.

After British authoritie­s identified two alleged GRU agents as the perpetrato­rs, releasing copies of their passports and a slew of CCTV images to back up the accusation, Russian social networks exploded with caricature photos and memes ridiculing the claim. The implicatio­n: the GRU would never do something so dumb.

Yet the Russian public may never know what actually happened, given the murkiness and myth that have surrounded the GRU since the Soviet era. “No normal Russian citizen has any idea what they are doing,” said independen­t military analyst Alexander Golts.

It’s not the first time that alleged GRU agents have failed to cover their tracks, stirring suspicions that they are trying to send a message. British Prime Minister Theresa May said the Skripal poisoning in March was a possible warning to other Russians in London that they aren’t safe, and threatened to strike back.

Either way, the accusation­s against the GRU fortify Russia’s image as unafraid to protect its interests on foreign soil, at any cost.

It also sends the people of Russia a signal that “nobody is safe from the long arm of the Kremlin,” John Sipher, a former CIA agent in Moscow who ran the agency’s Russia operations, said.

However, the proliferat­ion of security cameras means “it is harder and harder to engage in these activities without getting caught,” Sipher said.

The Kremlin calls the British evidence hogwash, along with everything else the GRU has been accused of in recent years — hacking the 2016 U.S. election campaign, trying to stage a coup in Montenegro, downing a Malaysian Airlines plane over Ukraine, running mercenarie­s in Syria.

Wherever the truth lies, the GRU is having its moment.

Created in the midst of the civil war that spawned the Soviet Union, the GRU was chastened by Stalin in the 1930s when it grew too brazen abroad, according to military historians. Since then it has operated largely in the shadows, overseeing special forces and listening operations — once by radio surveillan­ce teams, now by hackers, according to Russian military analyst Pavel Felgenhaue­r.

The GRU’s boss reports to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, but was named by President Vladimir Putin, a onetime spymaster himself. The agency also cultivated rivalries with Russia’s FSB, which concentrat­es on domestic intelligen­ce and counterint­elligence, and SVR, the foreign intelligen­ce service.

“If espionage is sometimes compared to courtship, organizati­ons like the CIA and the Russian SVR try to quietly and carefully develop longlastin­g relationsh­ips,” former CIA agent Sipher said. “The GRU is more like the boorish guy in a college bar who hits on everyone aggressive­ly.”

Yet there is value to the Kremlin in having such a blunt instrument, in Sipher’s view. As tensions mounted with the West since Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, the GRU’s prominence rose in part due to “Putin’s risk calculatio­n.”

The agency — technicall­y now called the GU but still widely known by its Soviet-era acronym — is increasing­ly upstaging rival agencies in the public imaginatio­n abroad.

It was the No. 1 suspect in the March nerve agent attack in the British city of Salisbury against Skripal, himself a former GRU officer who became a British double agent. He and his daughter survived the poisoning, but another local resident died months later from exposure to the same nerve agent.

The GRU is accused of a role in the annexation of Crimea and separatist rebellion in eastern Ukraine, and in leading a so-called shadow army in Syria. Alleged GRU agents have been targeted by U.S. sanctions, and 12 were indicted in July in Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into election meddling, accused of hacking into the Hillary Clinton campaign and releasing masses of emails.

Each time the GRU is outed damages the individual­s involved, but not necessaril­y the operation as a whole, Felgenhaue­r said.

While the GRU make for handy villains, some warn that too much Western attention to the GRU distracts from more important covert work by other Russian spy agencies. Experts believe the FSB or SVR carried out a parallel hacking campaign around the U.S. 2016 elections that hasn’t yet been exposed.

“In some ways, our focus on the GRU keeps us looking in the wrong direction,” Sipher said. “That said, they are profession­al organizati­ons dedicated to keeping secrets. There are central parts of their effort that we will likely never know.”

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