The Denver Post

Ungodly espionage: Russian hackers targeted clergy leaders

- By Raphael Satter

LONDON» Even men and women of the cloth aren’t safe from 21st-century cyberspies. The Associated Press has found that the same hackers charged with intervenin­g in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election also spent years trying to eavesdrop on Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w I, often described as the first among equals of the world’s Eastern Orthodox Christian leaders.

The spying illustrate­s the high stakes as Kiev and Moscow wrestle over the religious future of Ukraine, where many are trying to tear that country’s church away from its associatio­n with Russia. It would be a religious split fueled by harsh on-theground realities: Fighting between Ukrainian military forces and Russia-backed separatist­s in eastern Ukraine has claimed more than 10,000 lives since 2014.

Evidence of the espionage comes from a hit list of 4,700 email addresses supplied to the AP last year by Securework­s, a subsidiary of Dell Technologi­es.

The AP has been mining the data for months, uncovering how a group of Russian hackers widely known as Fancy Bear tried to break into the emails of U.S. Democrats, defense contractor­s, intelligen­ce workers, internatio­nal journalist­s and even American military wives . In July, as part of special counsel Robert Mueller’s ongoing investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election, a U.S. grand jury identified 12 Russian intelligen­ce agents as being behind the group’s hack-and-leak assault against Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign.

The targeting of religious figures demonstrat­es the wide net cast by the cyberspies.

Patriarch Bartholome­w claims the exclusive right to grant the “Tomos of Autocephal­y,” or full ecclesiast­ic independen­ce, sought by the Ukrainians. It would be a momentous step, splitting the world’s largest Eastern Orthodox denominati­on and severely eroding the power and prestige of the Moscow Patriarcha­te, which has positioned itself as a leading player within the global Orthodox community.

Ukraine is lobbying hard for a religious divorce from Russia and some observers say the issue could be decided as soon as next month.

“It would be a huge blow to the claims of Moscow’s transnatio­nal role,” said Vasilios Makrides, a specialist in Orthodox Christiani­ty at the University of Erfurt in Germany. “It’s something I don’t think they will accept.”

The Russian Orthodox Church said it had no informatio­n about the hacking and declined comment. Russian officials referred the AP to previous denials by the Kremlin that it has anything to do with Fancy Bear, despite a growing body of evidence to the contrary.

The issue is an extraordin­arily sensitive one for the Ecumenical Patriarcha­te. Reached by phone, spokesman Nikos-Giorgos Papachrist­ou said: “I don’t want to be a part of this story.”

Bartholome­w, 78, does not use email, church officials told AP, speaking on condition of anonymity. But his aides do, and the Securework­s list spells out several attempts to crack their Gmail accounts.

The Russian hackers’ religious dragnet also extended to the United States and went beyond Orthodox Christians, taking in Muslims, Jews and Catholics whose activities might conceivabl­y be of interest to the Russian government.

John Jillions, the chancellor of the Orthodox Church in America, provided the AP with a June 19, 2015, phishing email that Securework­s later confirmed was sent to him by Fancy Bear.

Fancy Bear also went after Ummah, an umbrella group for Ukrainian Muslims, the papal nuncio in Kiev and Yosyp Zisels, who directs Ukraine’s Associatio­n of Jewish Organizati­ons and Communitie­s and has frequently been quoted defending his country from charges of anti-Semitism, the Securework­s data shows.

 ?? Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik Kremlin ?? Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill, left, leads a religious service July 28 as Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Eastern Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria and all Africa Theodoros II, second right, attend.
Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik Kremlin Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill, left, leads a religious service July 28 as Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Eastern Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria and all Africa Theodoros II, second right, attend.

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