The Sunday Telegraph

Putin was a pen-pusher, not a super spy, magazine claims

- By James Kilner

VLADIMIR PUTIN was not a Soviet super spy in East Germany in the 1980s but a plodding pen-pusher eager to please his superiors, an investigat­ion has found.

Germany’s Spiegel magazine investigat­ed Putin’s murky past on the suspicion that stories of his exploits as a KGB agent were exaggerate­d.

Instead of conducting vital missions to hold back the forces of democracy,

Spiegel said, he was focused on “banal” administra­tive work during his KGB posting to Dresden, “sorting through travel applicatio­ns for West German relatives or searching for potential informants among foreign students”.

Putin was 32 when he was sent to Dresden in 1985, a tense time with the Kremlin’s grip over its vassal states behind the Iron Curtain fracturing.

KGB officers were tasked with supporting East Germany’s Stasi secret police.

And although the mission failed with the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union two years later, stories of Putin’s alleged valour have become legendary in Russia.

Perhaps the most famous is how in December 1989 he single-handedly faced down protesters planning to storm the KGB headquarte­rs.

However, it probably did not happen, the magazine reported. “According to one version [of the story], a single small man stood at the entrance to the nearby Stasi headquarte­rs and watched the spectacle from a safe distance,” Spiegel said.

“It cannot be proved the current Russian president was even there.”

Spiegel also reported that witnesses quoted widely on Putin’s other alleged KGB heroics could not be trusted. A story about Putin helping anarchists in West Germany to plot assassinat­ions was based on testimonie­s from a serial liar with a criminal record, for example.

‘Facts and fiction seem to blur. Today’s Russian president was probably not a top agent’

Another story of how he had groomed a German neo-Nazi leader into an informant was based on interviews with a former Stasi agent who has since admitted that he embellishe­d his statements.

In fact, there was nothing in the Stasi archives to suggest Putin was anything other than risk-averse, the magazine said.

“Facts and fiction sometimes seem to blur,” Spiegel said. “Today’s Russian president was probably not a top agent.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom