Houston Chronicle

Putin’s ID card for East German secret police found in archive

- By Palko Karasz

LONDON — Vladimir V. Putin’s time as a Soviet intelligen­ce agent in East Germany is largely shrouded in secrecy. He has claimed, for example, to have single-handedly dispersed protesters outside the KGB office in Dresden in 1989, in the waning days of the Communist government.

Now, German tabloid Bild’s publicatio­n of a photo ID card issued to a young Putin by the Stasi, East Germany’s secret police, pulls back the veil on one part of his tenure in Dresden, causing a ripple of excitement on social media and raising questions about his presence in the former German Democratic Republic.

The Putin ID card was also released Wednesday by the federal commission­er for the records of the state security service of the former East Germany. Printed on green passport-style paper, the card bears a black-and-white photo of a young intelligen­ce officer identified as Major Putin, who would have been 33 at the time.

It was issued on the last day of 1985 and has validation stamps for each quarter except one — the last quarter of 1986. The ID also bears what appears to be Putin’s signature.

The Stasi building was a stone’s throw away from the villa where the KGB had its offices.

“This is no proof that he worked for the Stasi,” Douglas Selvage, who works for the Stasi archives, said by phone Wednesday.

What the ID proves, said Selvage, who is an expert on the relations between the KGB and the Stasi, is that Putin, like other officers of the Soviet security agency, had access to the Stasi’s headquarte­rs in Dresden, most likely for recruiting locals for his intelligen­ce work.

The Kremlin’s spokesman, Dimitri S. Peskov, said Tuesday, “My guess is that in the Soviet era, the KGB and the Stasi were partners, and for this reason one should not rule out they might have exchanged identifica­tion papers and passes.”

The Stasi archive has released photos and documents relating to Putin’s time in Germany several times. But after a request in November by Bild, archivists took a closer look at the personnel files of KGB officers in Dresden, and found the ID, which had never been released, Dagmar Hovestädt, spokeswoma­n for the Stasi archive, said by phone Wednesday.

 ?? Stasi Records Agency / New York Times ?? A federal commission­er released a photo ID card issued by the Stasi to Vladimir Putin, who would have been 33 at the time.
Stasi Records Agency / New York Times A federal commission­er released a photo ID card issued by the Stasi to Vladimir Putin, who would have been 33 at the time.

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