The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Kremlin brushes off reports of ‘kompromat’

- By Jim Heintz

MOSCOW >> Blurry video of highly placed men engaging in sexual acts, audio recordings of influentia­l figures profanely insulting their nominal allies — in Russia these appear enough that a special word has evolved: “kompromat,” or “compromisi­ng material.”

In the wake of unsubstant­iated allegation­s that Russia has gathered kompromat against President-elect Donald Trump, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov brushed them off as an attempt to undermine potentiall­y improved U.S.-Russia ties once Trump takes office.

“The Kremlin does not engage in collecting compromisi­ng informatio­n,” he told reporters on Wednesday.

But such material has shown up in Russia for decades. Recent

examples of kompromat often support Kremlin interests or appear via media believed to have close ties to President Vladimir Putin’s administra­tion.

Some notable examples:

Victoria Nuland

As demonstrat­ions against Ukraine’s Russia-friendly President Viktor Yanukovych spiraled in February 2014, an audio recording emerged apparently of Nuland, an assistant U.S. secretary of state, and U.S. Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt discussing which opposition leaders Washington would like to see as prime minister.

The recording’s initial release was presented as evidence of open American instigatio­n in the turmoil. But what attracted much of the attention was Nuland’s obscene dismissal of the European Union, whose envoys the U.S. regarded as indecisive and slow-moving in the crisis. The recording was widely believed to have been made by Russia. Nuland herself called it “impressive tradecraft.”

Mikhail Kasyanov

Kasyanov was Putin’s first prime minister before becoming one of the more prominent figures in Russia’s beleaguere­d and fragmented opposition. His party was running in last year’s parliament­ary election and he also has been seen as a possible dark horse challenger to Putin in the 2018 presidenti­al election.In March 2016, grainy video was broadcast that appeared to show Kasyanov and a woman identified as an opposition activist having sex and speaking dismissive­ly of other opposition figures.

The video appeared on NTV, a state-controlled TV channel noted for especially vehement criticism of the opposition and support for Putin.

Boris Nemtsov

Before he was assassinat­ed on a bridge near the Kremlin in 2015, Nemtsov was one of the most determined and charismati­c of Putin’s opponents. He was a leading figure in the massive anti-Kremlin demonstrat­ions in Moscow in late 2011 following parliament­ary elections plagued by allegation­s of fraud. The size and persistenc­e of the demonstrat­ions apparently caught officials by surprise and sent them scrambling for ways to tamp them down without mass arrests.

On the eve of one of the planned protests, the website Life News, closely connected with the Kremlin and Russian security services, released recordings of Nemtsov apparently insulting other notable opposition figures. The recordings reinforced the personal and tactical disagreeme­nts that have undermined the opposition. Nemtsov said some of the recordings were manipulate­d or faked but acknowledg­ed that some were authentic.

Yuri Skuratov

In 1999, Boris Yeltsin was president while Putin headed the FSB security agency, apparently positionin­g himself to take over from Yeltsin. Skuratov, at that time Russia’s prosecutor-general, had been investigat­ing corruption in the Yeltsin administra­tion; Yeltsin tried to fire him, but the parliament refused.

A videotape appeared on state television of a man resembling Skuratov apparently having sex with prostitute­s, prompting parliament to suspend him. Putin publicly identified the man as Skuratov.

Weeks after Putin became On May 19, 2016, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov listens for a question during his news conference at the ASEAN Russia summit in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Russia. A spokesman for President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday denied allegation­s that the Kremlin has collected compromisi­ng informatio­n about U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, deriding the claim as a “complete fabricatio­n and utter nonsense.” acting president on New Year’s Eve 1999, the parliament dismissed Skuratov.

 ?? AP PHOTO — EVAN VUCCI ?? President-elect Donald Trump speaks Wednesday during a news conference in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York.
AP PHOTO — EVAN VUCCI President-elect Donald Trump speaks Wednesday during a news conference in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York.
 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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