The Macomb Daily

Antiwar officer from Putin’s elite security team defects

- By Erika Kinetz

LONDON >> On Oct. 14, a Russian engineer named Gleb Karakulov boarded a flight from Kazakhstan to Turkey with his wife and daughter. He switched off his phone to shut out the crescendo of urgent, enraged messages, said goodbye to his life in Russia and tried to calm his fast-beating heart.

But this was no ordinary Russian defector. Karakulov was an officer in President Vladimir Putin’s secretive elite personal security service — one of the few Russians to flee and go public who have rank, as well as knowledge of intimate details of Putin’s life and potentiall­y classified informatio­n.

Karakulov, who was responsibl­e for secure communicat­ions, said moral opposition to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and his fear of dying there drove him to speak out, despite the risks to himself and his family.

“Our president has become a war criminal,” he said. “It’s time to end this war and stop being silent.”

Karakulov’s account generally conforms with others that paint the Russian president as a once charismati­c but increasing­ly isolated leader, who doesn’t use a cellphone or the internet and insists on access to Russian state television wherever he goes.

He also offered new details about how Putin’s paranoia appears to have deepened since his decision to invade Ukraine in February 2022. Putin now prefers to avoid airplanes and travel on a special armored train, he said, and he ordered a bunker at the Russian Embassy in Kazakhstan outfitted with a secure communicat­ions line in October — the first time Karakulov had ever fielded such a request.

A defection like Karakulov’s “has a very great level of interest,” said an official with a security background from a NATO country, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive political matters.

“That would be seen as a very serious blow to the president himself because he is extremely keen on his security, and his security is compromise­d,” he said.

The Kremlin did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

As an engineer in a field unit of the presidenti­al communicat­ions department of the Federal Protective Service, or FSO, Karakulov was responsibl­e for setting up secure communicat­ions for the Russian president and prime minister wherever they went. While he was not a confidant of Putin’s, Karakulov spent years in his service, observing him from unusually close quarters from 2009 through late 2022.

Karakulov, his wife and his child have gone undergroun­d, and it was impossible to speak with them directly due to security constraint­s.

The Dossier Center, a London-based investigat­ive group funded by Russian opposition figure Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, interviewe­d Karakulov multiple times and shared video and transcript­s of more than six hours of those interviews with The Associated Press, as well as the Danish Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n DR, Swedish Television SVT, and the Norwegian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n NRK.

The Dossier Center confirmed the authentici­ty of Karakulov’s passport and FSO work identity card, and cross-checked details of his biography against Russian government records, leaked personal data and social media postings, all of which the AP reviewed.

The AP also independen­tly confirmed Karakulov’s identity with three sources in the U.S. and Europe and corroborat­ed his personal details, including passport numbers, date and place of birth, two registered addresses, and the names and ages of family members. AP was unable to verify all details of his defection.

AP also confirmed that Karakulov is listed as a wanted man in the Russian Interior Ministry’s public database of criminal suspects. The Interior Ministry initiated a criminal investigat­ion against Karakulov on Oct. 26 for desertion during a time of military mobilizati­on, according to documents obtained by the Dossier Center and seen by the AP.

The FSO is one of the most secretive branches of Russia’s security services.

“Even when they quit, they never talk, but they know a lot of details of the private life of the president and the prime minister,” said Katya Hakim, a senior researcher at the Dossier Center.

Karakulov moved as part of an advance team, often with enough specialize­d communicat­ions equipment to fill a KAMAZ truck. He said he has taken more than 180 trips with the Russian president, and contrary to widespread speculatio­n, Putin appears to be in better shape than most people his age. Putin has only canceled a few trips due to illness, he said.

Unlike the prime minister, Putin does not require secure internet access on his trips, Karakulov said.

“I have never seen him with a mobile phone,” he said. “All the informatio­n he receives is only from people close to him. That is, he lives in a kind of informatio­n vacuum.”

Karakulov’s work brought him to luxury hotels for summits, beach resorts in Cuba, yachts — and aboard a special armored train outfitted for the Russian president.

Putin’s train looks like any other, painted gray with a red stripe to blend in with other railway carriages in Russia. Putin didn’t like the fact that airplanes can be tracked, preferring the stealth of a nondescrip­t train car, Karakulov said.

 ?? DOSSIER CENTER VIA AP ?? Gleb Karakulov speaks during an interview in Turkey in December 2022. Karakulov, who was responsibl­e for setting up secure communicat­ions for Russian President Vladimir Putin, said moral opposition to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and his fear of dying there drove him to speak out, despite the risks to himself and his family.
DOSSIER CENTER VIA AP Gleb Karakulov speaks during an interview in Turkey in December 2022. Karakulov, who was responsibl­e for setting up secure communicat­ions for Russian President Vladimir Putin, said moral opposition to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and his fear of dying there drove him to speak out, despite the risks to himself and his family.

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