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Germany, EU React to GD Criticism Over Wanted Ex-Georgian Official Visit to Berlin, Brussels


The German Embassy in Tbilisi, and the EU Delegation to Georgia made statements about UNM-era former Chief Prosecutor and Justice Minister Zurab Adeishvili’s visit to Berlin and Brussels as part of the the Ukrainian delegation, which led to harsh criticism from the Georgian authorities. Germany cited lack of legal ground for banning Adeishvili, while the EU spoke of disinformation around the visit.

On February 22, Adeishvili, who has been sentenced in absentia in Georgia on several criminal charges, was seen sitting next to the Ukrainian Ambassador to Germany and Ukraine’s Chief Prosecutor in the German Bundestag, at a session discussing the delivery of long-range weapons to Ukraine. A few days later, he accompanied the Ukrainian delegation to a meeting in Brussels, with Gert Jan Koopman, Director General for Neighborhood and Enlargement Negotiations, leading to condemnation from the ruling Georgian Dream and demands for explanations from the EU and Germany.

The German Embassy in Tbilisi confirmed that Adeishvili, as a member of the Ukrainian Ambassador’s delegation, was on the rostrum reserved for guests of the German Bundestag and stated that “in Germany there was no reason, based on the principles of the rule of law, to prevent him from entering the Parliament”. The German Embassy noted that this fact has nothing to do with bilateral relations between Georgia and Germany, which “everyone knows” are “very good”.

On March 8, the EU Delegation to Georgia said Director General Koopman regularly meets interlocutors including from Ukraine and “his meeting last Tuesday was with the Prosecutor General of Ukraine who was accompanied by a number of people as part of the Ukrainian delegation.”

“Portraying this meeting in another way is disinformation (and the correct information can easily be verified on EU social media),” the EU Delegation in Georgia said, adding that “fighting disinformation against the EU is step 1 out of the 9 steps towards opening EU accession negotiations.”

The Speaker of the Georgian Parliament, Shalva Papuashvili, called Adeishvili’s presence in the EU institutions “unfortunate” and asked the EU Ambassador to explain whether the representatives of the EU Commission knew with whom they were meeting and what they had to say to the Georgian people about it.

“Zurab Adeishvili has been convicted of a wide range of crimes, from human torture to business racketeering,” Papuashvili noted. “When such a person is received with such honor in the discussion rooms by various officials, and then the same officials talk to us in the same rooms about judicial reform, vetting and human rights, I think it requires an explanation if we are to take their words seriously later on.”

Papuashvili reiterated that Adeishvili has been sanctioned by the Georgian court and that while Tbilisi is “scrupulously” complying with international sanctions, “it seems that some European countries are circumventing the sanctions imposed by the Georgian court.”

Papuashvili also criticized the Ukrainian government, arguing that “the heroic struggle of the Ukrainian people against aggression does not absolve its authorities of responsibility for protecting criminals.”

Another Georgian Dream MP, Irakli Zarkua, also called on the Foreign Ministry to summon the German Ambassador for clarifications. He also demanded explanations from the EU side.

Zurab Adeishvili, a highly influential figure in former President Saakashvili’s inner circle, left Georgia a day after the October 2012 parliamentary elections, that resulted the nation’s first peaceful transfer of power through elections since regaining independence in 1991. The Georgian Prosecutor’s Office put Adeishvili on wanted list in 2013 on several counts but still fails to achieve his extradition. In 2015, Interpol dropped red notice for him, which was issued in 2013. After the Maidan in Ukraine, Adeishvili reportedly moved to Ukraine, according to the latest information on his whereabouts, he is working for the Ukrainian authorities.

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NATO – Topic: Enlargement and Article 10 – NATO HQ


NATO – Topic: Enlargement and Article 10  NATO HQ

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Putin Ally Says CSTO Rift May Result in Armenia’s Demise – Hetq Online


Putin Ally Says CSTO Rift May Result in Armenia’s Demise  Hetq Online

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Putin Ally Says CSTO Rift May Result in Armenia’s Demise


Simonyan, addressing a panel discussion at the festival, criticized Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan for suspending Armenia’s participation in CSTO.

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@mikenov: RT @NEW_SYRIA_963: Congratulations to #Mossad’s employee of the month: Sayed Hassan Nasrallah 👏👏👏 https://t.co/8wL1bm6pZm



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Putin Pulls Russian Spy Agency Out of Ukraine


Vladimir Putin has removed Russia’s biggest intelligence agency, the FSB, from its role as the primary spy agency for the war in Ukraine and handed responsibility to a heavily militarized branch of military intelligence, the GRU.

The new lead officer, Vladimir Alekseyev, the first deputy head of the GRU, is strongly implicated in several of Putin’s most serious attacks on the West over the past decade. He is accused by the U.K. and the European Union of overseeing the chemical weapons attack in Salisbury in 2018. An experienced special forces officer, he is also sanctioned by the U.S. for direct cyber interference in the U.S. 2016 election.

Vladimir Alekseyev Russian Ministry of Defence Vladimir Alekseyev Russian Ministry of Defence

The public signal of the switch came last week, when the pro-Kremlin Tsargrad TV channel ran a story entitled, “Generals of victory: who is in charge of the Russian special operation?” The item suggested that these men would ensure the Russian military finally achieved its objectives in Ukraine.

Some of those named —like Gen. Alexander Dvornikov who was given overall command of the operation last month — were familiar to viewers, as were the heads of several military districts and major units. But there was one name that stuck out. Alekseyev was identified for the first time as the top general for intelligence on Ukraine.

The news marked a significant shift. Until now, Ukraine had been the responsibility of the Fifth Service of the FSB, the department which provided Putin with intelligence on Ukraine before the invasion. The disastrous start to the war, clouded by the pre-emptive publication by Western intelligence of highly secret plans as yet unrealized, and by the complete absence of popular uprisings by Russian speakers (which Putin was told would occur) cast a dark shadow over the department. Its boss, FSB general Sergei Beseda, was initially arrested and held in the notorious Lefortovo prison.

Alekseyev is a very particular type of Russian military intelligence officer. He started his career in the special forces, or Spetsnaz, rather than a posh and sought-after posting at some embassy in the West. His job in the GRU was to supervise the 14th directorate – leading the Spetsnaz, the paramilitary arm of the agency — and in 2011 he became first deputy head of the GRU.

The promotion of such men was typical of the new approach brought by Sergei Shoigu after he become Defense Minister in 2012. Alekseyev and his ilk became the new face of an agency that Shoigu was determined to expand, and quickly. But where to find the personnel? He raided the ranks of the special forces. They might not have the softer skills of other intelligence officers, but they were tough guys and ready to kill.

Alekseyev saw military action in Syria, and he was involved in the conflict in Donbas. Fellow officers regard him as brutal and self-confident to the point of recklessness.

The new man’s arrival has been accompanied by more shadowy and bemusing news about Beseda. Throughout the ordeal of his fall from grace, Beseda and his department became a magnet for in the blame game in Moscow – the military and even other departments of the FSB accused Beseda and his people of misinforming Putin, so laying the groundwork for a failed military campaign. Large sums of money earmarked for the subversion of Ukrainians were said to have gone missing.

It was widely assumed that Beseda was to be left languishing for years in solitary confinement in the Lefortovo, where Stalin’s disgraced aides were once held.

But two weeks ago, the pro-Kremlin media broke the news that Beseda had been seen at the funeral of the KGB general Nikolai Leonov. According to the report, Beseda gave a speech. He was described as acting chief of the Fifth service (although no footage was provided.) The aim was obvious — to kill or downplay the news of his downfall.

We checked with our sources in Russia. Finally, news came that Beseda had been seen walking into his office in the Lubyanka, the FSB’s neo-Baroque headquarters in Moscow. That sounded very odd, and completely unprecedented. To throw a general into prison and then return him to office was the sort of maneuver that only Stalin was capable of playing with his generals.

But there is some logic in that move. Putin is adamant that the war has been going “according to plan” and is likely acting accordingly. His audience is not the general public, still very much under the control of the Kremlin propaganda, but the Russian elites – the bureaucracy in the capital and beyond, including the military and secret services. They have been questioning Putin’s strategy, though only in private, and they are the people Putin needs to persuade that everything is going according to plan in Ukraine.

Throwing your top Ukraine spymaster into prison said the precise opposite and made clear that there had indeed been a significant intelligence failure in Ukraine. So, Putin’s message is now to pretend that nothing ever happened to Beseda.

But putting Beseda back in his office doesn’t mean Putin trusts the FSB, or Beseda’s service in particular, on Ukraine, as the Alekseyev appointment makes clear.

It is the gung-ho forces within Russia’s spy community that are now charged with plucking victory from the morass of their country’s worst military and intelligence failure since World War II.

This article was originally published by the Center for European Policy Analysis.  

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@emin_bred: RT @Intel_Online: 📣Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s re-election has strengthened the hand of agents responsible for monitoring presiden…


📣Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s re-election has strengthened the hand of agents responsible for monitoring presidential critics, with a trio of decision-makers overseeing this mission at home and abroad from Baku. https://t.co/NJz4zpgdpD

— Intelligence Online (@Intel_Online) March 8, 2024


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@emin_bred: RT @Olivia_Gazis: The multi-stop trip has not involved a ‘quad’ meeting of reps from US, Qatar, Egypt and Israel, as past talks have done,…


The multi-stop trip has not involved a ‘quad’ meeting of reps from US, Qatar, Egypt and Israel, as past talks have done, per sources, and Burns is not expected to stop in Israel. He is scheduled to testify before the Senate as part of the Worldwide Threats hearing on Monday.

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