The Herald on Sunday

Russians try to lure Scots to ‘summit of separatist­s’

Russians ‘underestim­ated the political sophistica­tion of SNP’

- By David Leask

A RUSSIAN who tried to lure Scottish nationalis­ts to Moscow has been formally linked to Vladimir Putin’s secret police.

Seven years ago, Aleksandr Ionov told this newspaper that he was in talks to bring Yessers to an all-expenses-paid “summit of separatist­s”.

Now, in the most compelling evidence yet of direct Kremlin attempts to meddle in Scottish politics, Ionov has been accused by American prosecutor­s of working for the successor agency of the KGB.

The Russian’s efforts to get members of the SNP and other pro-independen­ce groups to Moscow ended in complete failure. His summit was shunned by Scottish nationalis­ts, who saw the Putin regime as politicall­y toxic.

However, Ionov did succeed in attracting interest from the less significan­t separatist­s of California and Texas. And this put him firmly on the radar of the US authoritie­s.

Late last month, he was formally charged with illegally interferin­g in American politics.

“Ionov allegedly orchestrat­ed a brazen influence campaign, turning US political groups and US citizens into instrument­s of the Russian government,” said Assistant Attorney General Matthew G Olsen, announcing the prosecutio­n.

Crucially, the indictment details Ionov’s direct links to the Federal Security Service of FSB, successor agency of the KGB. The Russian, the Americans said, was answerable to at least three FSB officials.

Ionov last week denied the charges at a press conference in Moscow where local media described him as a “human rights defender”. He said the American charges were a witch-hunt against US figures who have pro-Russian or “balanced” positions. American separatist parties – which tend to be politicall­y inconseque­ntial – also deny Russian links.

Formally, Ionov leads a non-government­al organisati­on called the Anti-Globalisat­ion Movement of Russia (AGMR).

Back in 2015 – around a year after Putin first launched his war on Ukraine – this body announced a congress of internatio­nal separatist groups, some serious, many less so. Unnamed Scottish nationalis­ts were initially billed as attending, alongside representa­tives of Kremlin proxy republics in de-facto occupied eastern Ukraine, or “New Russia” as this area was sometimes then called by pro-Putin figures.

This looked like an attempt to legitimise the unrecognis­ed statelets of Donetsk and Luhansk in the Donbas.

A headline in Pravda back in 2015 set out the stall for the event.

“Texas, New Russia, Catalonia and Scotland will fight for their independen­ce from Moscow,” it said.

This newspaper asked Ionov to give details of Scottish attendees. “We are conducting negotiatio­ns with our Scottish partners from three organisati­ons. I can say that the party [SNP] is one of them,” he said.

“The Anti-Globalisat­ion Movement has been working with colleagues from Scotland for some years.”

The Herald on Sunday has been unable to find any mainstream Scottish nationalis­t who had contact with Ionov or the AGMR. Back in 2015, very senior SNP sources made it clear to this paper that they would have nothing to do with the group or the Putin regime.

An official party spokesman said: “We’ve had no contact on this and wouldn’t have any interest if we had.”

Ionov, ultimately, was unable to parade any Scots at his event. Scottish references were removed from the congress’s publicity.

In 2015, there was no public suggestion that Ionov or AGMR had direct links to Putin’s security services. Indeed, speaking to The Herald, Ionov stressed his organisati­on was non-government­al but confirmed that it “co-operated closely with the Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics”.

The AGMR did managed to woo Catalan independen­ce supporters, thought not to be from any of the major parties. One of its meetings was attended by somebody claiming to represent a group called Solidarita­t Catalana per la Independèn­cia.

Spanish newspapers have latched on to the US prosecutio­n as evidence for Russian interferen­ce in Catalonia. Russian media reports have also linked Sinn Fein to the AGMR.

The formal indictment from the US Department of Justice spells out what it sees as Ionov’s criminal activity.

“From as early as October of 2013, Ionov worked with officers of the FSB … to use members of political groups as foreign agents of Russia,” it says.

“Working under FSB supervisio­n and with FSB support, Ionov recruited members of various political groups within the US and other countries, including Ukraine, Spain, the United Kingdom and Ireland, to attend conference­s in Russia.

“At these conference­s Ionov entered into partnershi­ps with some of the US separatist groups, including groups from Florida and California.

“Thereafter, Ionov exercised direction or control over these groups on behalf of the FSB. Ionov also monitored and

The true nature of Putin’s administra­tion has been clear for some time. It is not a surprise that the door in Scotland was closed to his agents

regularly reported on their activities to the FSB.”

The DoJ indictment goes on to accuse Ionov of providing financial support to groups and telling them to publish pro-Russian propaganda. He also, prosecutor­s claim, co-ordinated coverage of the groups in Russian media.

Ionov’s failed efforts to sign Scottish nationalis­ts up to his events were followed a year later by the opening of a hub by Sputnik, a news outlet at the heart of the Kremlin’s propaganda efforts. Later, another Russian state mouthpiece, RT, decided to broadcast a chat show hosted by former First Minister Alex Salmond, now leader of the pro-independen­ce but anti-SNP Alba party.

The same station already platformed former socialist firebrand George Galloway, who went on to lead a shortlived and fervently pro-UK political party, All4Unity.

Both Alba and its anti-independen­ce counterpar­t flopped at the 2021 Holyrood elections.

Sputnik pulled out of Scotland last year citing a “hostile” environmen­t. RT was taken off air after Putin escalated his invasion of Ukraine earlier this year.

Scots – outside very online fringes on both sides of the independen­ce debate – appear to have proved unreceptiv­e to Kremlin influence operations.

Russia-watchers believe Ionov’s attempts to lure nationalis­ts to Moscow suggest a failure of intelligen­ce.

“It is very possible that the Russians underestim­ated the competence and political sophistica­tion of the SNP, which had been in power in Scotland for eight years by 2015,” said Peter Jackson, professor of global security at the University of Glasgow and executive director of the Scottish Council on Global Affairs.

“But I don’t think Scotland was necessaril­y a priority for this campaign, which seems to have adopted rather a scattersho­t approach to supporting and invigorati­ng irredentis­t movements within Russia’s rivals.”

For Jackson, Brexit helped achieve a Putin objective: weakening the UK. Scottish independen­ce would potentiall­y do the same. “So I would expect the Russians to try to interfere in the event of another independen­ce referendum,” he added.

The expert was not surprised the SNP rebuffed Ionov. Russia was very much a pariah by this time and facing internatio­nal sanctions over its initiative­s in Crimea and the Donbas.

He said:“It would have been remarkably stupid and politicall­y very damaging for the SNP to have participat­ed in an event organised by Russia and including the breakaway Donbas republics.

Shunned by Scots

“THE SNP aims to have an independen­t Scotland accepted as a legitimate state by the internatio­nal community.

“Involving themselves with an illegal separatist movement sponsored by Russia, and which uses violence, would make this aim impossible.”

Stephen Gethins echoed this view. The professor of practice in internatio­nal relations at St Andrews University is a former NGO worker who has hands-on experience dealing with the Russian military in unrecognis­ed statelets inside Georgia. In 2015, he was a newly elected SNP MP.

“The true nature of Putin’s administra­tion has been clear for some time,” he said.

“It is therefore not a surprise that the door in Scotland was closed to Putin’s agents.”

 ?? ??
 ?? Picture: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images ?? Independen­ce campaigner­s march through Edinburgh ahead of the 2014 referendum
Picture: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images Independen­ce campaigner­s march through Edinburgh ahead of the 2014 referendum
 ?? ?? Aleksandr Ionov denies the charges
Aleksandr Ionov denies the charges

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