Thousands of confidential emails between President
Putin’s advisers exposing the Kremlin’s efforts to break up neighbouring states
have been leaked by Ukrainian hackers.
Thousands of emails from the account of Vladislav Surkov, a key adviser to President Putin, were leaked by hackers
ALEXEI NIKOLSKY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
CyberJunta, a hacking
group affiliated to Ukraine’s spy agency, the SBU, has released a gigabyte of
data that appears to come from the email account of Vladislav Surkov, Mr
Putin’s point man on Ukraine.
The hack reveals
Moscow’s control over pro-Russian breakaway regions in Ukraine, Moldova and
Georgia. Emails to Mr Surkov show that the Kremlin was asked to approve
ministerial appointments, laws and even press statements for the supposedly
independent statelets.
A file shown to The Times allows users to browse through
2,337 emails and thousands of attachments sent and received from the account
prm_surkova@gov.ru between September 2013 and December 2014. During that time
Mr Surkov plotted the annexation of Crimea and helped to establish Russian
puppet republics in east Ukraine, the emails show.
More recent communications
have been handed to Ukrainian intelligence officials, who told The Times that they had sent them to the
CIA and other western agencies. Hackers have promised to release more Kremlin
data.
“This is the clearest yet indication of high-level Russian
involvement in the organisation of the separatist republics,” Anders Fogh
Rasmussen, former Nato secretary-general, said. “It demonstrates Russia’s
subversive tactics, which is why I’m calling for sanctions against Russia to
have a 12-month renewal.”
Moscow has repeatedly
denied providing military support to rebels in east Ukraine. Yet in May 2014, a
month after a pro-Russian insurgency began there, Mr Surkov received a list of
prospective rebel ministers, many of them Russian, for Kremlin approval. It was
sent from the office of Konstantin Malofeev, a Russian oligarch and imperialist
against whom sanctions were imposed by the EU and the US for “financing illegal
armed groups”.
Almost all of those
listed, including Alexander Zakharchenko, head of the self-proclaimed Donetsk
People’s Republic, were “elected” to the proposed positions in November the
same year.
A message sent in June
2014 to the Kremlin adviser from Denis Pushilin, the chairman of the “Donetsk
People’s Republic Supreme Soviet”, has an attached budget of $24,000 a month
for a press centre and newspaper, suggesting that the initiative was funded
directly by Mr Putin’s office.
A budget estimate for
the Luhansk and Donetsk regions, sent by a Russian official, suggests that
Moscow was looking at bankrolling the rebel republics with up to £4.85 billion
a year.
“We can see by the
summer of 2014 they were already financing the DPR small time and preparing to
go big,” said Kirill Mikhailov, a researcher at the Conflict Intelligence Unit,
an international organisation that documents Russian activities abroad.
The Putin administration
was also sent casualty reports during the fighting for Donetsk airport,
according to lists of dead and wounded sent to Mr Surkov by rebel leaders.
Media monitoring reports, prepared by one of Mr Surkov’s assistants, express
delight that western media had failed to grasp the extent of Russian control
over forces fighting the Ukrainian government in east Ukraine.
Later, after Malaysia
Airlines flight MH17 was shot down by a Russian missile, the assistant warns
that the “obviously weak positions” of rebel spokesmen were being exposed by
the international press.
Most of the emails sent
to Mr Surkov were weekly briefings on events in Ukraine, Moldova and the
regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, which broke away from Georgia during
bloody conflicts in the 1990s.
The inbox, which appears
to have been administered by secretaries named Maria and Yevgenia, also sheds
light on Mr Surkov’s daily life. An invitation to a reception at the French
embassy and orders for $100 leather diaries are among the leaked emails.
Moscow has denied that
the leaks are genuine, claiming that Mr Surkov does not use email. “I don’t
know whether this is done by our domestic hackers or by foreigners, Dmitry Peskov,
a Kremlin spokesman, said. “[Mr Surkov] is a very talented person and therefore
it is natural that everybody tends to attribute something to him. Most often,
it doesn’t reflect reality.”
Experts believe the
complete inbox is too complex to have been fabricated. “The complexity of this
leak and its metadata, which shows the path of these emails through servers,
between real people, leads us to conclude it is genuine,” Aric Toler, an
analyst for UK investigative group Bellingcat, said.
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