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Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 12:52 PM 10/11/2018

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Internet research is the practice of using Internet information, especially free information on the World Wide Web, or Internet-based resources (like Internet discussion forum) in researchInternet researchhas had a profound impact on the way ideas are formed and knowledge is created.

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A public warning to Putin: Knock it off – 12:25 PM 10/11/2018 – The News & Times
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A public warning to Putin: Knock it off – 12:25 PM 10/11/2018 – The News & Times
 

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A man identified as Alexander Petrov at Gatwick airport in England on March 2. Investigative group Bellingcat reported Monday that he is actually Alexander Mishkin, a doctor working for the Russian military intelligence unit known as GRU. (Metropolitan Police/AP) One of the most satisfying moments in any spy thriller is when the bad guy — the black-hat operative who has been killing and tormenting his adversaries — does something dumb and gets caught.

Source: A public warning to Putin: Knock it off

A public warning to Putin: Knock it off

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A man identified as Alexander Petrov at Gatwick airport in England on March 2. Investigative group Bellingcat reported Monday that he is actually Alexander Mishkin, a doctor working for the Russian military intelligence unit known as GRU. (Metropolitan Police/AP)

One of the most satisfying moments in any spy thriller is when the bad guy — the black-hat operative who has been killing and tormenting his adversaries — does something dumb and gets caught. That’s essentially what’s been happening recently with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s pet spy agency, the GRU.
What’s fascinating about the GRU revelations is that they seem to reflect an aggressive pushback after several years in which Putin (chiefly through the GRU) launched recklessly aggressive covert actions against the West. The West is retaliating (at least in part) with public information that blows GRU covers and operating methods and, frankly, makes them look clumsy and incompetent.
These disclosures are the latest in a string of disasters for the GRU, a military spy service known for its panache and daring. Now, we should add sloppiness to that list of operational trademarks. The GRU’s spycraft occasionally looks closer to TV’s Maxwell Smart than John le Carre’s vaunted fictional spymaster, Karla.
The latest exposé of the GRU’s not-so-secret tradecraft came Tuesday, when a British investigative group shredded a layer of the lies surrounding Russia’s attempt to poisonformer agent Sergei Skripal in March. It was the equivalent of the tough guy in the trench coat getting caught with his undershorts around his ankles.
Bellingcat, as the group calls itself, presented photographic evidence showing that a suspect in the Skripal attack, who the Russians had claimed was a tourist named Petrov who worked in the sports nutrition business, is really a GRU doctor named Alexander Mishkin. Last month, Bellingcat had exposed another suspect, whose cover identity was Ruslan Boshirov, as GRU Col. Anatoliy Chepiga.
The most detailed exposures of GRU tradecraft came in a Justice Department indictmentthat was unsealed Oct. 4, in tandem with supporting statements from Britain and the Netherlands. The indictment, which named seven GRU officers, included details about Russian spy operations that could have been collected only by the CIA and National Security Agency and its foreign partners. (Three of the Russians had also been named in July’s indictment of 12 GRU officers for meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.)
Last week’s indictment is a treasure trove for spy mavens. One GRU hacking operation sought to sabotage the World Anti-Doping Agency’s effort to punish Russia for systematically drugging its Olympic athletes; a second, chilling GRU hack stole information from Westinghouse about advanced U.S. nuclear-reactor technology. A third targeted two investigations of the Novichok nerve agent used in the Skripal hit, one by an international chemical weapons group in The Hague and another by a chemical laboratory in Switzerland. These were brazen operations, but they were also messy.
The dry pages of the indictment reveal tradecraft secrets that could animate a half-dozen spy novels. The GRU operatives used spoof websites to “spearphish” victims into revealing login information (creating a “westinqhousenuclear.com” site, with the misspelled “q,” for example). They made payments in bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. (Weren’t those supposed to be untraceable?) They used malware tools with names such as “Gamefish,” “Chopstick” and “X-tunnel.” They dumped their hacked information by sending direct messages on Twitter to 116 reporters and exchanging emails with 70 journalists.
For the past few years, the CIA, NSA and FBI have watched as hackers and whistleblowers (perhaps with a helping hand from Moscow) revealed the agencies’ hacking techniques. For U.S. intelligence officials, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.
The most astonishing disclosure came from the Dutch, who caught four GRU officers red-handed in The Hague as they were hacking the headquarters of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. As Dutch intelligence officers intervened, “the conspirators abandoned their equipment,” including a backpack and other gear that revealed techniques and a string of other operations, according to the indictment. The Dutch even found a taxi receipt showing that a member of the team had left the rear entrance of the GRU headquarters in Moscow and headed to the airport.
The implicit message in all of this: If you hit us, one of the ways we will retaliate is by exposing your operatives, sources and methods. There are other reprisals underway, but these public disclosures undermine the GRU’s operational capabilities. And they must make the Russian spy service wonder: What else do the Americans and their allies know? If agent A is blown, then what about his colleagues B, C and D?
The CIA and its foreign allies don’t normally like to divulge secrets like these, because they reveal how much they know about their adversary. The revelations are a public warning to Putin: Knock it off; you’re more vulnerable than you think.
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Germany AND Novichok

STRATFOR

How Russia Makes Power Plays in European Politics

The organization was investigating the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter — believed to have been carried out by GRU operatives — in the United Kingdom using the chemical agent Novichok.

56min

Salisbury news: Historic handmade quilt on display

RALPH NOYES AND Bonnie Adkins stand in front of the 1933 friendship quilt recently given to the Salisbury Church and hanging in the church’s narthex….  Photo courtesy Salisbury Church SALISBURY — The Salisbury Church is holding a rummage sale on Friday and Saturday, Oct.

50min

boshirov AND petrov

The Sun

Skripal Novichok assassins may have had an accomplice who flew in and out of UK on the same dates as two GRU …

A mystery third man, using the alias Sergey Fedotov, reportedly landed in London on March 2 – the same day as  ‘Alexander Petrov’ and ‘Ruslan Boshirov ‘…. These men are wanted over the attempted hit on the Skripals in Salisbury Timeline of movements of Russian nationals Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov who are suspected of conspiracy to murder Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, Wiltshire The 45-year-old was on a different inbound flight, but left on on the same plane as the GRU agents on March 4, according to an analysis of passenger lists by Fontanka news agency.
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Internet research is the practice of using Internet information, especially free information on the World Wide Web, or Internet-based resources (like Internet discussion forum) in researchInternet researchhas had a profound impact on the way ideas are formed and knowledge is created. 

Internet research – Wikipedia

 

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New Abwehr – Skripal – Yanukovych – (possibly Putin) – Oligarchs – Manafort – Trump – Google Search

 

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The Postcards from the Skripals – 6:41 AM 10/11/2018 – Russia

 

russia-news.org/2018/10/11/the-postcards-from-the-skripals-641-am-10-11-2018/
1 hour ago – The Postcards from the Skripals: “My glass is half-full, and mine is three quarters full, note that red marker… Und Me takez zi pictzcha… A lot of …

Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury | Sergei Skripal – 7 …

 

trumpinvestigations.org/…/operation-novichok-the-postcard-from-salisbury-sergei-skr…
4 days ago – mikenov on Twitter. Russia News: Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury – 7:15 AM 10/7/2018. Novichok Signatures View image …

Unanswered questions about the poisoning of Sergei Skripal …

 

https://www.ft.com/content/10d8a266-2b99-11e8-9b4b-bc4b9f08f381
Mar 19, 2018 – Clips of Mr Skripal’s car driving through Salisbury have been released, … There may be good reasons for the police to keep their cards close to …

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Salisbury poisoning: Skripals ‘were under Russian surveillance’ – BBC …

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-44717835
Jul 4, 2018 – Ex-spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia were monitored before their poisoning, the BBC … Salisbury poisoning: Skripals ‘were under Russian surveillance’ …. The women sending postcards to Kavanaugh’s accuser. Harrods …
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Second Skripal Poisoning Suspect Identified as Dr. Alexander Mishkin

bellingcatOct 8, 2018
Bellingcat can now report that it has conclusively identified the second suspect, who travelled to Salisbury under the alias Alexander Petrov.
Salisbury attack – as it happened: Second novichok suspect Dr …
InternationalThe IndependentOct 9, 2018
Bellingcat Uncovers ‘Alexander Petrov’ as Doctor Employed by GRU
InternationalThe Moscow TimesOct 8, 2018
Poisoning suspect honored by Putin in 2014, UK group says
In-DepthTampa Bay TimesOct 9, 2018
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What is Bellingcat? The online sleuths who identified the Skripal suspect

The Australian Financial Review3 hours ago
Bellingcat was founded using crowdfunding from a Kickstarter campaign by the blogger Eliot Higgins. After being laid off from his administrative …
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