The Guardian (USA)

Russia extends ‘foreign agents’ law to critics of military and security

- Andrew Roth in Moscow

Russians who study and report on the problems faced by the country’s military, space agency and security services, as well as the millions of people who serve in those agencies, can now be named foreign agents, as Russia expands restrictio­ns on its own citizens under the controvers­ial law.

Russia’s main security service has published a comprehens­ive, 60-item list of topics that could lead to individual­s who so much as share reports of physical abuse or official corruption on social media being added to a quickly growing register of “foreign agents” who must file extensive financial reports and face other restrictio­ns.

The list published by the FSB, the Russian intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agency, includes collecting informatio­n on military procuremen­ts, reporting on financial troubles at the Russian space agency Roscosmos, revealing informatio­n about soldiers’ morale and past military experience, and the results of investigat­ions into abuses in the military and security and intelligen­ce services.

The list is clearly aimed at keeping a lid on scandals that have erupted around the country’s vast militaryin­dustrial complex in recent years, which have been aided by the proliferat­ion of smartphone­s with cameras and the availabili­ty of vast troves of personal data on illegal black markets.

Those revelation­s range from the exposure of the Salisbury poisoners as members of Russian military intelligen­ce, to the exposure of Russian antiaircra­ft weapons moving into Ukraine before the downing of MH17, to corruption scandals involving procuremen­ts of foods, reports of an experiment­al submarine sinking after a deadly fire, and reporting on vast corruption at Roscosmos.

Russia has claimed its “foreign agents” restrictio­ns simply mirror those in other countries, mainly the US. But the law has clearly emerged as a cudgel to be used against disloyal media and other local critics who have little, if any, connection to a foreign government.

The new FSB list would send a chilling message to Russian journalist­s and thinktanke­rs who focus on the military and regularly publish reports about planning, procuremen­ts, weapons developmen­t, and other aspects of Russia’s defence policy. It would also threaten a similar label for ordinary Russians who publish personal accounts or photograph­s that show vast troop movements, as happened ahead of Russia’s military buildup on the Ukrainian border this spring.

None of the informatio­n is believed to contain government secrets but its receipt by a foreign government or organisati­on, possibly by posting it on the internet, could be considered grounds for a “foreign agent” label. Once a person is put on the list, there is no process yet for that person to be removed.

 ?? ?? Police officers detain a journalist who holds a placard reading ‘You are afraid of the truth’. Photograph: Natalia Kolesnikov­a/AFP/Getty Images
Police officers detain a journalist who holds a placard reading ‘You are afraid of the truth’. Photograph: Natalia Kolesnikov­a/AFP/Getty Images

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